Perhaps you have to accept the first
as such
to accept the second.
Second,
nothing was this abstract.
There was the sidewalk between her
and the tree, and the cluster
of tourists (so I assume
they are because I cannot imagine
seeing enough of here
to call it home)
between the tree and her photo her
hovering
spilled into my
anticipation like
her red buzz cut
spilled over a “dyke” label with
unironic joy, spilled and left the overflow
gleaming like her smile
on the sides of the letters.
Nothing was abstract.
Tourist cluster past I
failed to wait
like I would have on a day
not overflowing.
“And save the best for last.”
No, I try to explain
later, not the kind
of shoving back into your body clamping
down the lid,
like when a man calls “hey baby”
from the same periphery.
More like someone
filled your body up with enough
of itself that you feel
it could spill over.
Like on that one axis,
tree—traveller—sheer-cut joy
your body is enough.
She would rather watch you hurry
on than have her photo.
Do you understand?
How long I have longed to be someone’s best
saved for last?
Of course—First,
an abstraction.
On our way in, a rainbow
welcomed us through the Lincoln
Tunnel.
But because nothing
can stay that abstract
it lit us close
ups of spray paint close
enough to see how it mingles with the wall’s
particles, not close
enough to see
whether it is anarchist A’s
or segments
of a machine that spits out hearts.
To get that close,
you need the second, need that moment
when you realize how bad
you want your heart to not
have been mangled in that machine, how quickly
you would let a stranger with her hair
approximating its gleam
fill it and kiss it back
into place.