Airplane Mode
If I were free, what would I write?
Fly away!, he said, Free as a bird!
I flapped my arms to carry the joke.
I was about to board a plane.
But the joke isn't funny unless we know I'll be back.
I've a foot fix'd in Oakland.
My heart beats a little harder, wondering:
Did I get the joke?
Is the resolution of ambiguity centered on the certainty
that even by driving me to the airport
to sit in a box that is thrown by air and fire
to a far away land of ports
that he is not sending me away?
Or, even so, is he sending me like one might
send the far end of a rubber band elsewhere,
temporarily, before the band returns to itself?
How much of it was a joke?
I hear the memory of his voice whispering in my mind
the same way he said,
quiet as an exhale, the first time I left,
to me,
to himself,
to no one in particular:
"I just want to see you again."
And I locked it in my heart like a promise:
I'll be back.
He needs me to be free, so that coming back means anything.
Prepare for takeoff -
Before setting my phone to airplane mode, I text:
Miss you already
His reply sneaks in, just as I disconnect:
I will see you again!
His last message, trusting me to keep him an honest man.
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