Melody squeezed my hand then let go. “And I’m a TA.
So, you wouldn’t have seen me because we teach on the balcony.”
Two whole weeks I’d been watching
for this girl, but had never taken a moment to look up.
Anytime I went to class, I got ready like I was going on a date.
Because even though I was on the ground, and she was on the balcony,
I wanted to make sure if we ever had a reason to speak
I looked good, smelled good, everything good.
I showered before class, pat-patted on cologne, popped a mint.
I checked myself out in the hall mirror and left with enough time
so I could walk slowly to class; I didn’t want to rush and arrive
sweaty. Any break we had in the simulation room, I glanced up.
She was always in her TA’s uniform. Her voice clipped and
stern, but clearly she wasn’t all business because her students
were often smiling. I pretended she was talking to me, her husky voice
brushing against my skin, blooming goose bumps in the aftermath.
After class, if she got out early, sometimes I’d catch her
downstairs writing up her notes. And she’d smile
and I had to bite back every single corny thing I’d ever
wanted to say, like:All of me is an invitation reaching toward you,or
my fingertips ache where they haven’t touched your skinor
I hear the promise of us in the crescendo of every ballad
and maybe I was supposed to be a bachatero instead of a pilot
because all I had were torch songs for a girl I barely knew.
Which is why, when it was the end of the semester, and I was
in Carnegie Library, where I should have been studying, I didn’t take her
“So, what’s up with all the lip pointing?” personally.
The arrival of her was like a craving being fed.
I had been FaceTiming my moms, and was trying to show her
how to navigate her doctor’s online portal from her phone,