Today will not be the last time I walk through this cemetery with my notebook and pencil. But this will be my last blog for a little while. It is finally warm. It is still gray. I think that the gray quality of Pittsburgh may be inescapable, a result from all the years that fires charged steel under these hills.
But today, I come across two markers that do not inspire grieving over separation. About a half a mile into the cemetery lie the stones and bodies of Thomas and Maria Messler. They rest under a canopy, a tree that elbows over them. It shades them together in intimacy under the tree and away from the world.
Every few minutes Maira’s hips roll over onto something hard and pointy under the checkered blanket. Her, “Ouch!” is playful and followed by a laugh. It is a good catalyst for touch, and Thom asks if she wants him to, “kiss it and make it better?” She does, and he kisses her hip covered in a sundress.
Black ants fight to get up the walls of the basket. They fling them off one at a time, and marvel at how they keep moving after they are fired from their fingers. They built a relationship through their eyes, dogging one another’s look between short kisses. They fall for each other in a dialogue of smiles, and the sharp snapping sounds from the bitten skins of apples. I imagine them kissing with their mouths full. I think people in love do that, I know I would.
Today, I smile. I slowly back away, not wanting to be a disturbance, leaving the together to their picnic and death—under the tree.
I used to spend a lot of time in Pgh cemeteries with a friend of mine, an art historian and an art collector/purveyor. Sounds fancy, but she lives a life that barely allows her to get by. I think about her a lot when I read your posts.
ReplyDeleteI love your posts here because it forces me to think of the other side of things. I usually think of gravestones and artistic movements and history. What was going on while they weren't around to see it? But I'm glad to see you imagining a life that isn't your own, that tells us something about our own romance: with life, with love, and with our own mortality.
You created quite a romantic story this particular experience in the cemetery and I enjoyed it: let's hear more! Hah. I think it's amazing that those two gravestones struck you to think of the beauty of connection after death, since you've always focused on that separation. The way you've interpreted that connection is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThe imagined story found in this place is so compelling! I wonder how many more stories there are? That would be a really interesting short story collection...
ReplyDeleteI love seeing these photographs too :-)