The Astronaut’s Lover
by Audrey Elledge
You dreamt of rising.
My allegiance was to gravity.
And yet I would’ve painted brave on my face and joined if you asked.
(You didn’t ask.)
Still, I loved you enough to let you go,
to watch you melt into dark ink
while my feet sank further in this sloping earth.
Up and up and out, you took
those searching hands
those climbing eyes
that lust for stars
that marker-dot freckle, you know the one.
Did the countdown sound like a song?
Did you glance over your shoulder?
Did you forget earth was bigger than the moon?
The crashing news, the word of the end came
like bird-cry at dawn—
startling and expected.
I knew even before you left that
Love takes what belongs to it.
And so she won this tug of war, that moon.
I want to despise her, but she is still what she’s always been,
what we all are: jealous and giving; glittering and trembling.
A stranger once told me he could never grow close because
I reminded him too much of someone he lost.
Well, that’s great for you, I thought. Try avoiding the moon.
At first, I boarded my windows at night,
pulled tight my curtains against the waxing and waning crescents,
the tally marks of my ongoing loss,
this terrible and gleaming weight.
But the earth has kept me so tenderly.
While you stay on the moon,
I have stayed in the fields,
in chipped coffee mugs
in swallow songs
in juice running down my wrist
in lead on my hand
in laughter out of familiar mouths
in flowers lingering like music in jars
in the grace of gravity
in white-tipped waves
and the stone that cuts me at the bottom of the sea.
And finally, one night in the undraping dusk,
I look to her pale full face and don’t think of you,
only wonder at the silent gifts of this world,
and at how even darkness can again be bright.