Denver
When you’re gone you’re gone. That first house you bought on South Grant Street, some kids you don’t know slide down the driveway on skateboards. A
stranger sits at your desk in the Broadway brick building, never heard of you,
the building is a different business now, has nothing to do with the fan-belts
and radiator hoses they make in the spooky factory across the street that’s now
a condo complex. That dive bar where you got shitfaced after college hockey
games is a fashion boutique next to a pot shop. Those softball diamonds all
over town, you can watch twilight games in July with players your kids’ ages or
maybe your grandkids’ ages. On one of those diamonds, you played in January’s
annual Sno-ball tourney and froze your ass off. Your favorite bookstore moved across
town. You and your girlfriend walked down Fillmore to the old place, it
smelled of books and not coffee and the two of you found books and a quiet
place to read for hours. Fourth of July at your aunt’s and uncle’s house you
and your cousins almost burnt down the wooden fence with Wyoming fireworks. A
procession of strangers have lived there and they keep on moving out and moving
in and you don’t recognize any of them when you drive by. Camping near Grand
Lake, we skip rocks in the shallow creek that grows into the mighty Colorado as
it tumbles down the Rockies. Concerts at Red Rocks, you can see where you sat
in the middle seats, surrounded by those with their own memories, the Eagles
and The Dead, full moon coming over the mountains, lights of Denver down below.
You’re not there. Days and weeks, months and years. Memories orbit like
planets, find you where you are now. At the old Stapleton airport named after
the KKK mayor of the 1920s, you drove to down Martin Luther King Junior Boulevard
to get there. You linger outside the boundary fence, stand on the car hood to
almost touch the arriving planes, hear the blast and feel the whoosh of the
engines. It was 1978 on that July afternoon you first flew into Stapleton for a
new job. On that day, you didn’t know it yet, but you were already gone.
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