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BROOKLYN CURVED AWAY
We had made our way down to where the river and ocean roll together underneath that bridge where, as Ray Carver said, water comes together with other water.
It was windy, the first fall day so the water was choppy from that and from the boats, that sloughed their way upstream packed with crates like children's blocks on their metal backs.
When the wind picked up your hat, and sent it careening down the walkway like a runaway we chased it catching the black brim just before it went over the railing.
We headed up the path, walking hand in hand, our faces red from windburn scanning the rocks for driftwood, tangled fishing line and maybe a dead crab. After awhile Brooklyn started to curve away from us like an old friend passing on and Manhattan started to appear, and then disappear flirting it's way up the coast, a mere seven miles from where we were, down where the ocean is.
But it had been so long since I had seen the ocean that Manhattan didn't look so grand after all not next to those whitecaps not compared to the shadow of that silver bridge spanning a river that forced its way through the land.
It was a good day, and we had gotten good news about my father's cancer. Not to mention, we had the whole day together for a change. So it could have been that. I just wanted you to know this is one of those days that I'll remember, even when I can't remember anything else
Just cause it was so easy to stand under that bridge with you and not do anything but watch all that water get away from me.
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