When you say you want your ashes scattered
on the ocean when you die, I don’t
like imagining your gawky bag
of bones incinerated, sprinkled like fish
flakes over an aquarium.
“They have Eco Urns now,” you correct
me. “A buoy you pour me into. Then
when the bottom of the buoy dissolves,
there I go.” You flutter your fingers.
When I die, I say, just put me in the trash.
Or leave me in the apartment with the cats,
but dress the cats up in little outfits,
a Santa Claus and elves with jingle bells
on their little cat hats, so when
they get hungry they’ll devour me
adorably. Only I have no cats.
The party is over. The keg’s kicked
and the few stragglers drape over sofas,
scraping pipes with twisted out paper clips.
Someone’s put on Darkness on the Edge of Town.
Someone’s asleep in the room where I left my coat.
“Stay,” you say, but I’m tired and unmoved
by what looks like a wave swelling inside of you.
So I keep on walking away, through
the quiet neighborhood, the rest of winter,
the next year, a new job, new apartment,
bad roommates, and worse, and loves!, each
the one to save me if I’d let them, until one day
the chance to tell you I should’ve stayed
that night, that I’ll make it up to you,
is gone forever, just, as they say, like that.
After you died, you weren’t cremated
like you wanted, but buried in a family plot
in New Hampshire. I saw it on Facebook,
the social media we both most hated.
I almost left the story of when you snuck
mescaline onto an airplane in the comments.
I want just once to do right by you
before I’m already looking backward at it,
at you, at the two of us
passing a Camel back and forth on the steps
after everybody else has gone home.
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