Indianapolis Nights
I am home.
We are older now. My friend Corrie and I sit at the table in a crowded restaurant, order chips and salsa, order plantains drenched in mole, order agua fresca – sweet honeydew and lime so that it tastes the way you forgot summer tasted: just a little sour, a little sweet, honeysuckle delicious in a glass. It is August and we feel the late summer heat upon us. She puts her hair up. I brush mine over my shoulders. We talk about the past, reminisce, carry with us the memories of these twenty-five years of friendship – the ways we've grown together, moved away (me to another country, her to another city) and still stayed in each other's orbit the way true friendships do. Oh I think (but I don't say it out loud) how few friendships really last, for me, and how beautiful this one dinner is, and how my feet feel steady here, briefly. I am home. It is never enough time – only one week this time – and it feels delicate. Crinkled in my fingertips, like a paper moon. We eat big forkfuls of tres leches cake and lick up the icing, spoon wine sauce into our mouths, binge on the flavors of the evening. The moon comes out and the stars do too. It is my last night in Indianapolis. Tomorrow I will fly across the world again. I am not ready to go.
We drive home and towards downtown, and the road itself leans, pulls us in to the center of the city like gravity undone – the lights, the way the monuments are drowned in a blue glow, the way it all looks like a galaxy painted on black canvas on nights like this, like it pops, the whole of it. In my mind these streets were where I lived as a child and I can picture me in them, sliding through these snapshots: the me in the polka dot dress, the me in the choir uniform, the me that holds my mother's hand and crosses the street, one foot out in trepidation. The me who, years later, saw the grid of streets in high school, walked to the basketball game, hair down my back, swishing back and forth, my bare teenage arms, the sweet softness in cheeks, in laughter, in pineapple gummy bears, in summer starlight – and how I will never be that girl again, that woman, that long-haired mistress of 1998, she is long gone – this entire body is different – and how Corrie and I didn’t know each other all those years ago, not then, but we drive through it like maybe she can see it too, like we both have our back stories, our growing up, entire worlds, and at some point they meet, come together, collide. What happened to those years? We follow this lane into our past lives and turn at the light, criss-cross the city a thousand times to see it from every corner, trace it with our fingertips as if the night was built to last – all of these sturdy Indianapolis nights – like we can memorize them once again, live them through and through, one last time (whispered, like a prayer) until the milky moon collapses into puddles of itself and we have no choice but to say goodbye.
Jacqueline Goyette is a writer from Indianapolis, Indiana. Her work has appeared in both print and online journals, including JMWW, trampset, Phoebe Journal, The Forge Literary Magazine, Gone Lawn, and Centaur Lit. She currently lives in Macerata, Italy with her husband Antonello and her cat Cardamom.