I don’t remember what I was told
when I was eight years old
and my grandfather died
and his body was cremated so it was no longer
a big body made small by cancer but a smaller body
made insignificant by fire.
I might have been told he was sleeping
and I might have been waiting
in the rain at his funeral,
watching the gold colored urn of him
being placed into a marble wall,
waiting for him to wake up
and become big again.
I might have, in my little blue suit
and black patent leather shoes,
hoped that something, the sound of the rain,
or an angel made out of wet grass and wet pine needles
and the wet faces of the mourners, would wake him up.
Tonight, I just want Richard to wake up.
I want to be a smoker again
and pull a lighter out of my back pocket
and light the cigarette I just bummed from him
while we stand close together under the evergreen
in Vermont
that shot straight up through the rain and clouds.
I want him to wake up and re-enter the gore of his body,
its pink and gray anatomy,
and find some clothes and find some shoes
and walk across the earth and sit next to me.
And sit next to Connie
and sit next to Ellen and sit next to Sue
and sit next to Trinie, Nick, Marie, and Michael, too.
And if he’s too tired from being dead for three days
I’ll go to him, naked in the undressing of my mind.
Right now, my children are sleeping
and will one day be dead in their lives.
Right now I am halfway through my life
and I will be dead, as dead as a mouse,
as dead as any other creature.
Right now, the only life I want back
is Richard’s life.
I want the god of horizons and the god of lodestones
and the god of drawbridges and caravans and mangers
and money and mascara and dildos
and the god of ships
and fish and eggs and earthquakes and the god
of all kinds of things wanted
to breathe him back and body him back
and carry him back because,
oh lord I loved him.
But if he can’t come back.
If he can’t ever wake up again,
then I want nothing but his absence.
I want that absence whole and warm and alive.
I want to be able to sit next to it and hug it
and talk about the shitty morning I had
when I dropped the last of the milk
and how it poured across the floor
and how my youngest sat
in front of his dry bowl of cereal
and looked at me
and how I looked out the kitchen window just then
and saw nothing.
No sky, no trees, no birds, no rain,
no cars, no yard, not even a neighbor's house.