Orbit




In Krakow,
under the mutual agreement of cobblestones and centuries,
I stopped for lunch
because hunger, like history,
does not wait for proper context.

A restaurant offering pierogi
seemed more convincing
than the Hard Rock Cafe,
which had installed itself
with great confidence
in the wrong century.

A young woman greeted me.

Blond hair,
a practiced smile,
the unmistakable economy of someone
who has already lived this day once before.

We spoke.

Nothing of consequence—
which is to say,
everything necessary.

And then the thought arrived
with equal parts whimsy and angst:

why are our lives intersecting here?

She will remain—
serving, walking, returning,
knowing which streets curve and where to her laundry.

I will leave—
to my kitchen,
my coffee,
my purple toothbrush,
which performs its duties faithfully
without ever asking where it is in the world.

Meanwhile—

each of us continues
as the center of a system
no telescope has fully mapped:

families in orbit,
memories in storage,
songs that arrive unannounced,
conversations that replay
with slight editorial improvements.

Entire infrastructures
built without engineers.

Whole histories
proceeding without witnesses.

We sit across from one another
for less than an hour—
long enough to exchange currency,
not long enough to exchange lives.

She brings the food.
I thank her.

This is recorded nowhere.

And yet—

somewhere in the vast accounting
of everything that happens
and is immediately forgotten,

our meeting persists
as a minor, precise event—

like a crumb on a table,
like a word almost remembered,
like the brief and mutual illusion
that we have interrupted each other’s lives.

Meanwhile,
her life continues in all directions.

Mine does too.

Both of us,
at intervals,
certain of our centrality.

Both of us,
entirely surrounded
by things we will never know.

—Iris Lennox