I came to your wedding uninvited. You have known the groom for three years, I have known you three hours. With him you have traveled the world. With him you have seen hundred-year-old sea turtles circle your anchored schooner along the Great Barrier Reef, fed Atlantic puffins upon the rocky fields at the Cliffs of Moher, tasted freshly picked lechosa near Angel Falls, heard the thunder of bighorn sheep head-butting in the Grand Canyon, lost your breath at the radiance of the aurora borealis in Akureyri. With him an Indian Chief in Acoma explained the oneness of the earth and humanity, a Buddhist Lama in a Tibetan gompa described the sanctity of the balep he fed you, a Wiradjuri elder by the Wambuul River told of the secrets the sun and the moon keep, a Yanomami Pata ThΓ«pΓ« in an Amazon rain forest summoned the spirit of the macaw.
But in only three hours, I, no longer a stranger to you,
foreshadowed all these moments. I laid at your feet the mysteries of life, and
you received them as if you had been waiting for me long before you knew my
name. Yes, just for the unbearable delight of looking into your eyes, touching
your cheek, holding your hand. I remember the warmth of your fingers closing
around mine, then loosening, as if even then some merciful part of you was practicing
leaving me. You would not have gone with him to these places and listened to
those wise leaders if it were not for my urging. I beheld you, beheld you,
beheld you, penniless, rich with passion and desire, not of the flesh but of
the spirit. Is that not what you wanted? We met years ago, but I have never
forgotten those three hours with you; they have outlived meals, cities,
illnesses, prayers, every sensible attempt to call them small. I have always
been with you—in the silence before sleep, in the instant before laughter, in
every distance you crossed with him. Your union with him may endure, but your
bond with me is of stone. We get one chance in this world. You were mine for
less than an evening.
You know I am here, don't you? Without looking at me, you see me. I saw it when the music began: the smallest break in your smile, the breath you swallowed before anyone else could notice. I know you won’t approach me, though your husband will eject me from your wedding without ever knowing who I am. You won’t approach me because if you come near enough to hear me breathe, if you look at me once, you know my answer will be the same as when I came to you at the start of our three hours together years ago, when you were standing alone in Greenwich Village, or was it on the Croisette, or was it on the Grand Canal, or was it near the Chillon Castle, when you asked me, in a language you were learning, “Why did you come here?”