I don’t know why I decided to write this today, dammit, because I will cry if I do and my brownish-black Great Lash (not waterproof because that’s nasty stuff) mascara will dissolve until I look like Maggie Gyllenhaal in “Crazy Heart” when Jeff Bridges wipes a pool of sooty tears off her cheekbone with his big thumb and says “Look at you” right before he kisses her, only I’ll be here alone with my keyboard and soggy Kleenex, eliminating any possibility of a shot for dramatic effect. And God knows neither you nor I have sidestepped a chance at drama since that fate-smacked summer of 1970, 42 hot Julys ago, when we met. Collided, actually.
Wait. I forgot to tell you that I actually fell in love with you back in 1956 in Las Vegas when I was in first grade and you were my friend Melissa’s big sister’s boyfriend Peter The Lifeguard. That he and Big Sis eloped and her horrified parents had their whispered weekend marriage erased and banished him from the kingdom doesn’t matter. Impossibly handsome Peter was foreverafter my Imprint: shortish solid studly tan Peter with thick dark hair and eyes the color of brownies, a wry smile full of straight white teeth, blue lifeguard trunks and a whistle. (Decades later there was an unconfirmed but not surprising rumor that he had become a Palm-Beachish gigolo in a wealthy West Coast beach town.) It also doesn’t matter that you were a married father of two going to law school many hundreds of miles from Las Vegas when I was six and that none of your names is Peter. When you walked toward me through my boss’s office door 14 years later, you were Peter and that was that.
Except it wasn’t. I mean part of that happened a few weeks later after a nightful of scotch-and-sodas and thigh-rubbing in a very smoky bar, but the rest of that took eighteen more years and a lot of history and histrionics until we got married and then spent another twenty living our unscripted version of Mad Men Meets Gidget Goes Hawaiian. How many times did we break up, hang up on each other, condemn each other in the strongest possible language, swear we would never ever again … and then have the most I’m-so-so-sorry, moon-howlingest, sweaty-haired makeup sex? A scant handful of serious boyfriends and a couple busloads of chicas scattered through the blank spaces, us driving past each other’s houses to check lights and license plates, dozens of hang-up phone calls and avoiding each other on downtown sidewalks and in conference rooms – we did them all, every cliché in every cheesy paperback romance, even I did them, me, the lifetime president of the No Clichés Club. When one of your kids gave me a t-shirt (the day before our wedding) with drawings of a porcupine and a cactus and the caption “The best relationships are challenging ones,” I should have known what was coming.
But what if I had? It wouldn’t have changed a thing. Because neither of us was ever able to forget or replace the other, not for long and never for real.
I used to think I was the moon that orbited your planet, the one unable to break free. How could you – handsome, brilliant you – be attracted to a girl with the face of a milkmaid and Kansas thighs? It took a long time to figure out that I’m as smart as you are and you think I’m beautiful even if I don’t, that you see the same face whether it’s pink slick clean and has invisible eyelashes the color of cornsilk or an hour’s worth of painstakingly-applied-to-look-perfectly-natural paints and sauces. Maybe it’s that I’m a good cook and I take care of every tiny thing you could possibly need, that you are utterly dependent on me for the necessities of daily life, that you would have to learn where the grocery store is and unjam your own printer, figure out more buttons on the remote than Channel and Volume. Or maybe I’m your Peter. Maybe it’s that simple. We are both planets, caught irresistibly in each other’s gravitational field, perfectly balanced to stay within sight, within reach, pulling on each other’s oceans, creating tides and clouds and wind. I am your weather and you are mine: cold and stormy, balmy and warm, chilly, icy, burningflaminghot.
But here comes the hard part. Because, Virginia, there is always a hard part.
So many people we know have died: my dad and Marge, your mother, your dad, many, many friends, more all the time, those familiar faces in the newspaper. We’re getting old now, both of us, but you’re old-er. I’m a happy, optimistic person, not maudlin or morbid, and I never used to think about death, scoffed at people who did, including you. But last year was full of dead guys and my brother having cancer, and that makes it real and so much easier to see now, know now. Someday dying won’t be just something that happens to other people. Like Sally told Harry about being 40 years old someday, “It’s out there.” That scares me spitless, makes my heart beat hard, fast.
There’s a story about Jacqueline Kennedy, what she did at Parkland Hospital in Dallas when her husband died. She told Ted White that she insisted the doctors leave her alone in the room with dead, sheet-covered Jack. One of his feet was sticking out from under the linen. She kissed it. Pulled the sheet off and looked at his flaccid, naked body, his blasted head with a piece of skull missing, brain exposed, little bits of which were stuck in the dried blood on her pink skirt. She kissed his thigh, his chest, his lips. (Pierre Salinger later said that White had used “foot” as a discreet euphemism for “penis,” but by then neither Jackie nor White was alive to confirm or deny.) Whatever parts they were, she kissed them, and him, goodbye. She took off her wedding ring and pushed it onto one of his fingers, down to the middle knuckle.
When I read that (every time, the first time, even this time), I squeeze my eyelids shut so hard the tears squirt straight out of them like those lizards whose eyes shoot blood, and then I gasp and hold my breath and listen to my heart thump. I imagine a cosmic trade I could negotiate if I believed in God and she were in a bargaining mood: I will die a crashing fiery death if I can please die first, if I don’t have to ever stand there holding your cooling hand, kissing your blue lips. How could I ever leave that room and let you go, knowing I would never see you again? I don’t think I could. I’m pretty sure I would be like one of those chimpanzee mothers who can’t believe that her baby has died and carries its limp, decaying body around for days, cradling its head on that floppy stalk of a neck, grooming its dull hair.
Awful, awful. I know. Who thinks about this stuff, huh? But I’ll tell you that, oddly, admitting it makes it happen less often. And so I don’t stay in the rabbit hole, I put this terrible smoky ribbon of fear in a pink box, close the lid, slide it onto a high shelf and go on with my day, my life, my loves and you. It hums softly, the fear does, and reminds me that I’m lucky to have another day, that you are well and strong and funny, that our love is no ordinary dime-store love, that we have a love as amazing as those Legends of Love in history. That I am the Josephine to your Napoleon and you are the Richard to my Elizabeth, that as long as I breathe, I will fight off the bears and keep you warm, I will swallow bits of you and carry the taste deep inside me, as long as I have arms, I will hold you, that you will stay with me forever.
There are two red chairs in the room where we watch television every night, the one on the left for me, the right for you. They sit side by side, but there is enough room for a person to walk between them, just enough room that, if we reach our hands toward each other, our fingers touch. We do that sometimes, touch fingers. I turn my head and look at your profile, your incredibly handsome face. I step across the space and fold myself onto you in your red chair, knees to hips, yours to mine, mine to yours, my lips where your neck and shoulder meet. The pulse in your throat taps my closed eyelid where a picture of you is tattooed on the inside. And I say to myself: you are my only one, my great love, I have this great love.


Salon.com
Comments
You are a strong woman, indeed.
I'm so warmed by the fact that you have this deep love, and I understand the need to be the first to go. And I know you will go about loving and the next time the fear comes, it will feel like this. And you will go about loving. And so on.
And so it is, to love.
begins a paragraph that contains some of the most powerful imagery that I have ever experienced. To say: "Well done" would be a gross understatement. It was wonderful and mirrored how I feel about Mel.
The last paragraph however sent chills down my back. That is exactly how Mel and I have our chairs situated...hers on the left, mine on the right and close enough a person can pass between but we can still reach our our hands and touch fingers.
In closing, I am never, ever disappointed when I come to your blog.
Yes, just like 'em.
Two binary stars,I'd say: not planets, for they revolve around other things, but two potent, blazing stars.
Personally, I want us to go together because I wouldn't wish the alternative on either one. But, you know, there's also Eleanor and Henry's agreement in Lion in Winter to defy age and life forever (though I wouldn't want their tusk to tuskness).
And, finally, this is beautiful, as is your (plural) love.
It's about you. Both of you.
It's about us.
Any of us who can see their own flawed self through another's eyes.
and let you go, knowing I would never see you again?
thank god i never had to do it, for my parents.
they died as children (maybe of Heaven?) not knowing..
Jackie gal did
what a wife should do/will do.
Fabulous writing revealing great love. To love and be loved. Is there any greater purpose?
Just...damn.
i'm so glad for you, scanner, and that you are grateful for her. thank you.
OM, from everything you and barry write about each other, i knew you would understand all of this, every word and every thought.
thank you, kim, for being such a good friend and reading behind every line i write what i'm trying to say. and for the compliment, i'm grateful for that, too. :)
david, the red chairs! maybe it's something about us old folks, the way we sit close but not too close, close enough to reach for someone? i'm so glad you and mel have each other, so glad.
22, i'm at a complete loss for words. that comment is a poem standing all by itself and is so good. rich-blooded hearts ... all of what you said will stay with me, but those words are perfect. thank you.
wow, joanie, if you think that, it must be true. i'm so glad you came and told me. so many thanks, so many. xo
thanks, ralph!
ding ding ding. mom likes it, so it's a winner. majorly happy here.
pilgrim, we might be stars, mot and me? he'll be so pleased to think so. and i love your brit reference, but living forever solves the who-first problem but presents another - i'm picturing my unBotoxed face at age 452. urg. all silliness aside, thank you, dear friend.
jaime, your first sentences made me laugh so hard! and then i nodded - because you know. and so we wait and hope, don't we? thank you for the very kind words.
diana, thank you for your lovely, lovely comment. it means a lot, you know.
david: never, ever, pfffffft. ;) hahaha!
rita, i can see the wisdom and understanding in your eyes. and in your poems, actually, friend. and i love that we might be a firecracker, too. xo
aka: thank you, and it is. and for me, that was what was always so hard to see until we got old, that the 'us' is the bigger deal, how to think of the other person as half of 'us' instead of just an individual. as the movie says, it's complicated, especially that flawed part. thanks for coming by.
james: i appreciate your comment very much. thank you for reading and taking the time to write it.
awww, barry, your words are always excellent, even the ones you leave unsaid, fellow solo traveler. xo
thank you, nick.
i was pretty sure that this one would get your eyes watering up there in canada, scarlett, for the obvious reasons. and your comment cuts through it to what's important - love and be loved. that's all, isn't it? thank you so so much.
aww, jeanette, you're such a gem. thanks.
and you, too, tril, many many thanks.
Thanks for sharing~
R
What a beautiful love letter!
That's all.
xxoo
in Martinique
... if I believed in God,
and if no one spoke there, but
everyone looked in everyone else's eyes...
if the wind against the stained glass,
blew... until the windows finally opened,
if... outside, beyond the white tiled
cemetery, photograph frames and dried bouquets,
a woman... nutmeg tough and aged salt-sweet skin,
in flats and braless, in a long cotton dress
led an ancient, black bull by his stainless steel nose ring
...down a steep, winding road
to the Carénage...
Candace... Love's memory ~ Thank you for reminding me to go there...
again.
Lezlie
I know what you mean about imagining the deaths of our loved ones. Of course, it doesn't turn out to be like that but it doesn't stop us...as if we could prepare.
Keep on holding him tight.
I am glad you wrote this. I thought of basil.
Tomatoes are excellent for make prostrate.
I cry under a Weeping Willow Tree. Honest.
I planted a Beautiful Tree. Memory. Deaths.
I believe tears transform we mortals. Sweet.
I am not insinuating that Death don't hurts.
At some funerals I'll shout`a damn cowards.
I mean I'll attend a politicos funeral to barf.
Beautiful writing, Candace.
This writing is the turning of the heart inside out releasing all the facets that make for an intense, incredible life-long love affair. Beautiful writing.
susan, i read those letters when they were in the news (was it VF?), too, and they were gorgeous, weren't they? burton was as good with words as he was as an actor. such a love they had.
your comment makes me very, very proud, julie d. i'm delighted you braved the trip.
ll2, real love is always worth it, always. though i'll go further and say that i'd really rather be alone than with someone i don't adore. but then i've always loved being alone. :) thanks for stopping by.
gabby, it's all a matter of luck, isn't it, finding someone to love this much who loves you back the same? i can't begin to tell you how grateful i am to have him. and to have friends like you and others in my life.
sheila, thank you so much for your very kind comment.
bea, i hope it didn't make you sad. :( i think you get what i was trying to say, though - in fact, i know you do.
cappy, i love that you mentioned the music, tho' 'pretty good' isn't what i was aiming at. kidding, dude! snerk. thanks for the happy. me, too.
thank you, DHSS. and it's nice to meet you!
thank you, denise. i know you came over because of denise's link on FB, so i'll thank her for that, too.
you are a lucky woman, too, boomer sister sally, and we both know it. thank you for the lovely comment. i'm always so glad to see you.
what a flattering compliment, trilby. thank you very much, for reading the piece and leaving the comment. i'm very glad to meet you.
MOC, i know you get this in a way that is as poignant as it gets. which makes your comment even more treasured. thank you, brave example.
interrobang, that is one of the most beautiful responses in a comment i think i've seen in the two years i've been here. i sat here last night, reading it over and over, in stunned, speechless silence. if what i wrote took you to that memory, i am exceptionally grateful for that chance and have said that to the sky. thank you so much.
thank you *very* much, lezlie, for reading it and for your praise. it warms my heart.
margaret: like MOC, you know so much more than i do, and i hope this didn't cause you pain. i'm sorry your love was gone before he could read what you wrote, but he knew it in his heart, didn't he? i just got lucky and could show it to tom. he did read it. it was a moment, as they say. thank you for getting through the read yourself and for leaving me your lovely, lovely comment.
cartouche, i hoped you would find time in your insane life to read this because i knew you would get it. you and i know the rest. we have to make a plan, as simone says, or it will be 2012, woman. soon. and thank you thank you.
thanks very, very much, froggy. i'm so happy you think so.
MAWB, i'm so glad to see you! and i'm delighted that you liked it. thanks for coming by and telling me.
midwest, thanks, dude. tho' this isn't cover material - too personal, i appreciate your comment and your sentiment.
heron, as you sometimes gently remind me, it is as important to recognize and be grateful for one's good fortune as it is to revel in it. that's part of the progress both tom and i have made on this sometimes rocky path, especially in these last few years. thank you, dear dear friend. off to do some kissing ...
nikki, i *so* appreciate your reading the piece and commenting in such a heartfelt way. hold him tight is exactly what i am doing, will do. thank you.
renatta !!!!! i'm so happy that this piece coaxed you out (with a little nudge from me) and that you loved it, that it made you both hot and cold. so so good to see you.
art, my favorite country gentleman poet, thank you for your words and for reminding me that "tears transform we mortals." they do. and your poems make me smile, especially the ones about barfing on politicians. xoxo
thanks, con. that's what i'm aiming to be, in the next life if not in this one.
and considering, miss aim, how *wordy* you are (and were earlier yesterday about joanie's shoes), i suppose i should be triple proud of myself!! thanks, sweetie.
thank you so much, linnn. i miss your writing. have i told you that lately? i really do. and i think mot is pretty grateful, though he could say that more often. men. huff. xoxo
denese, you're right about what you teach. it's hard, really hard, to have this all these years later. which makes me hugely grateful but also honest enough to say it's half luck and half making it happen instead of waiting for it or giving up and letting those early feelings drop off. and thank you for the writing compliment - that's really what posting stuff like this is mostly about, for me.
maria, i couldn't love your writing more than i do. i've read your comments three times. you are a wonder, woman. heart-sharer, indeed. i'm so so grateful to know you. thank you.
"no ordinary dime-store love" indeed.
mister c, don't be silly! i'm thankful that you came by and read it. whatever you want to say in a comment is just icing, you know?
thank you *so* much, sophie. so much.
i appreciate that you came by and read it, jonathan, and echoed our friend mission. thank you very much.
psyche - [sigh] *you* know that ideal world, i know you do, which makes your comment all the more wonderful. thank you. and sorry about the mascara. xoxoxo
I've had the same thoughts (though not so poetically phrased!) given that men don't tend to live as long as women and my husband is almost ten years older. But I won't think about that today...
to. me. Lovely. All. Of. This. Thank you and love to one who can write of love like this.
my eyes are misty
I feel my heart beating-
heavy beats
Your words so perfectly placed
not one that was not needed
to show this great love
this beautiful relationship
I sadden for myself
because I had one too
but he died eighteen years ago
and I refused to believe
I deserve another great love
since so many have never had one
So, I got to know a stranger
and found out what it means
to love
myself
Oh such a lovely poetic love letter you wrote
I will remember it for a very long time
rated with love
The rhythm and pace of this was pitch perfect.
At least one, or two, people do.
and when he is older than she
she makes him PROMISE she gets to go first
and if he WON'T promise
she SWEARS she's goin with him...
(well, I can't write anything today either)