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Fleeting Everlasting
the acrid smell of sunscreen
 and nauseous chlorine
 brings back when two worlds first collided.
  
 the edges are blurred—
 I see the rubber lining
 and the diving board
 and when you first taught me to swim
  
 kick your feet 
 left, right, left, right,
 flail your arms—doggy-paddle
 don’t look back.
  
 we made leprechaun traps
 and set them on the pavement
 and stared at them all day
 with clover stems in our mouths
  
 and my face turned green
 as you got a Tamagotchi,
 left our scribblings in the recycling bin,
 and blended with the other kids.
  
 one day, you decided our doodles were good,
 and you dragged me into art class
 where you cried every day
 about how horrid your drawings were
 and we played “maze monster”
 a game of our own invention
 until your tears had dried
 and your sweat had matted your forehead
 and your smile was back intact.
  
 you grinned at me devilishly
 and sang nonsensical tunes
 about nuclear hot dogs
 while your ex-best friend
 stuck a middle finger at you
 and you shrugged it off
 like it was nothing.
  
 you came to school the next day
 with a finger removing magic trick
 which you promised to teach me
 if I ran around the oval fence in less than ten seconds.
  
 so I put my game face on
 and sprinted it in eight
 but you shook your head
 and pretended you’d never made the promise.
  
 you cut out two tiny triangles
 from fresh, white, printer paper
 and stuck them to your gums.
 the simplest Halloween costume,
 but also the most menacing,
 as you backed me into the closet.
  
 what color? you asked.
 stop it.
 please, let me see.
 stop, stop.
 pink? that’s disgusting.
 stop! stop!
 why won’t you stop?
  
 I found you screaming one day
 in the grasp of a teacher
 who threatened to call your parents
 if you weren’t quiet.
  
 and your eyes were bloodshot
 and you caught a glimpse of me
 and you gave me a sheepish smile
 and I ran back inside
 and my heart was pounding
 and your smile had faded
 and you turned back around
 with eyes so uncertain, it hurt.
  
 the sun rose the next day,
 but you were gone.
 they had taken you home.
  
 two days passed,
 a week,
 a month.
 a whole year of silence.
 for I couldn’t speak without you.
  
 why won’t she speak to us?
 why is she so quiet?
 what have you done to our daughter?
 please, stop.
 what have they done to you?
 we’re moving.
 please, no.
  
 I woke to a rumbling outside the window.
 moving services, said the large truck parked in the street
 and I vowed to never forget the carefree youth I knew
 and the heart wrenching pain in your eyes
 before you vanished.
  
 I followed the river trail in our new backyard
 and saw a face so familiar—
 you were older,
 and a bit taller
 but your features still so recognizable.
  
 among the throng of kids,
 you were desperately folding paper boats
 while the others tried to sink them
 and you were startled
 when I gave you four unsinkable ones
 and even more startled
 when you saw the scar you had created two years ago.
  
 you asked why
 I was helping you
 and I answered with a tentative smile
 that you had taught me how to swim.
  
 in the acrid smile of sunscreen
 and nauseous chlorine,
 the memories are coming back now.

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