Always Winter But Never Christmas

(All I Want Is You)

Do you remember waking up?

(I wasn't there. Sorry.

But you told me about it.)

You said they played pretend

like you woke up back then

but they lacked the conviction

to really sell you on it.

Waking up to a Brooklyn

you'd mistake for Manhattan,

but not the one you knew;

you missed the Summer of Love

and the twenty summers before it.

You woke up and wireless

didn't mean radio, it meant

computers (things that were

the size of rooms; also

after you, of course)

in everyone's pockets.

Came back to consciousness

and you were alone, all alone,

your friends dead or frozen

or forgetful, in her case.

You told me you made do,

building a new life in the

shadow of the scaffolding

of the silhouette of your legacy.

Within the month, you'd gone

and saved the world again.

Except it didn't mean much

to you, because it wasn't

your world anymore.

You said that you wondered

what you were doing on that

high-tech monstrosity (just

like the one I almost

killed you on; funny how

things work out sometimes;

poetic, almost, how we both

realized we were out of our

depths on the same class of

modern warship) among the

glittering stars of screens

you'd never see in my

favorite comics. (You said

you were excited to show

me everything, and I, ever

charmed and bemused by your

enthusiasm, said nothing

about how I had used, or

been forced to use, those

selfsame technologies,

intimate with them like

my knives under my hands,

just another tool for

killing for my puppeteers.)

You recounted how you saw

you and me in the museum

(in the same place I learned

who I was, who I still am).

We were twin relics, both

buried in ice, static and

comatose, missing and

presumed dead for decades.

And now what are you?

What of the version of you

in the frozen depths?

What of me, my fucking body

turned into an empty

marionette in a twisted

Vaudeville act? Did you

spare him a thought

when you went for what

you wanted in a world that

was yours? Did you spare

me a thought when you

broke every promise you'd

ever made me, every promise

I'd ever made you, every

silent vow and secret oath

we never said but in the

language of fingers laced

together when the sun couldn't

see us? Death hasn't done us

part yet, you scrawny

motherfucker, I hope they

wake me up early to

kill you at their convenience.

I hope he doesn't ever

remember your face, like

I can't forget it; I

would hope he haunts your

worst nightmares, except

I want him to go through

with the only mission I

couldn't complete. I want

him to come at you, unawares,

just close enough to see

the horrible emptiness in

his eyes when he kills you.

I hope your last thoughts

are of me: the me in him,

the me you left behind here.

My last thoughts during

that neverending freefall

were of you and your eyes

and the way your feather-

fine hair turned to spun

gold in the sunlight. My

last thoughts were of the

fear I'd disappointed you,

left you vulnerable without

me. I hope your last

thoughts are the realization

that you devastated me,

when you left me behind in

the future to pursue a

past that was never yours.

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