Oh!
“Oh!” she said, and
stopped.
The sound repeating
over
and over in her head,
much louder than she’d
actually said it: Oh.
The picture still in
her hand, showing him and the ex-girlfriend
who she’d never seen,
or heard described – yet somehow, she knew
not a friend, or
cousin, or any other ex, she knew
and that ‘Oh’
struck right to her core,
struck right to her core,
because she knew,
too,
that he’d been right (not
that
he’d ever said this,
or could)
– that this was
so clearly, the kind
of love she’d never had,
with him, or anyone –
never would, perhaps,
she thought
(but this really was an
afterthought,
a conscious attempt
to redirect, reassert
her own claim on
happiness).
Because what had
really been expressed in that ‘Oh’
was just sadness.
They should be
together, she thought (she knew),
and why oh why oh why
did they ever
split up.
(Which she knew, too,
he’d spent roughly the last two years asking himself,
including the three
months or so she’d known him.)
Still staring,
sensing how self-destructive this was,
but unable to escape
that picture, which
she knew she’d never escape –
the look in their
eyes, their faces, laughter, smiles,
all somehow combining
to suggest such perfect
togetherness.
(Like children
accepting all innocent
that the world is
benign.)
It cut straight into
her, cut her breath, stopped her voice, left that ‘Oh’
hanging, repeating inside her mind,
long after she’d left
the room,
left him,
all behind.