with the basics already accomplished,
   Cole and I made it all about nuance.
   I WAS UP IN TIME FOR CLASS
   Darian, who had missed Monday,
   missed Tuesday, too. I have no idea
   if she and Spence slept all day,
   emerging like vampires when the sun
   went down, or what. Neither do
   I know for sure how Cole entertained
   himself while I was at school.
   All I know is, he was waiting for me
   when I got home. Some nights,
   we had dinner out. Others, we cooked
   together like a regular committed
   couple. It was a pleasant holding pattern
   until the fledgling soldiers had to return
   to Pendleton for SOI—School of Infantry,
   where recruits learn vital warfare skills—
   Machine Gun on the Run or Grenades 101.
   Cole and Spence would sort into
   different groups there—Cole to the
   Infantry Training Battalion, and Spencer
   to the Marine Combat Training Battalion,
   before moving on to his chosen
   Military Occupation Specialty training.
   AT THE TIME
   I was clueless about such details.
   All I knew about the Marine Corps
   was that it was about to swallow
   the new guy in my life. The tall,
   serious one from Wyoming, who
   enjoyed staring me down with amber
   eyes and making me come, first
   with his tongue, and then the magic
   way only he knew how to do.
   I wouldn’t have used the word “love”
   then, but I was well on my way there.
   It would take several days of silence,
   brooding about what our time together
   actually meant, for the first real pangs
   of love to strike. But as Cole tossed
   his things into his backpack, this little
   voice kept whispering, “God, you’re
   going to miss him.” And when he
   went to pee before leaving, I slipped
   one of his T-shirts back out of his
   pack, stashed it beneath a pillow.
   I wasn’t exactly sure why then, but
   later, when my bed seemed terribly
   big and lonely, Cole’s shirt, still smelling
   of him, brought comfort. And when
   he finally had to say good-bye, a river
   of emotions—sadness, joy, regret,
   hope—permeated our last kiss.
   I couldn’t make it last long enough.
   When he turned away, he left me breathless.
   A RIVER
   Threads the desert
   landscape, splinters
   desolation,
   an artery of life
   blood,
   silver-blue. And carried
   in its tepid flow,
   a promise of one
   more tomorrow,
   each apricot dawning
   soaked
   with hope for the young.
   History is an unkind teacher.
   The elders are wise
   and well beyond
   dreams
   of glory, riches,
   or gentle death. Enough,
   in a war-tattered land,
   that thirst does not
   ravage
   the throat. Enough
   that, bellies taut
   with the valley’s slender
   abundance,
   children sleep through
   the night.
   Cole Gleason
   Present
   I’VE NEVER CONSIDERED MYSELF
   A romantic. Probably because
   no evidence of anything even
   remotely resembling romance
   existed in the house I grew up in.
   Maybe, if I think way, way back
   to my pre-kindergarten days,
   I might catch a glimpse of Mom
   and Dad kissing. But holding hands,
   or whispering sweet nothings?
   Nope. Not even a vague memory
   of such things. I’d see them for
   what they were on TV or in movies—
   fiction. In high school, boyfriends
   were more about status than happily
   ever after. Relationships came.
   Relationships went, and not only
   for me. It wasn’t that I didn’t like
   the idea of falling in love. But I settled
   for fleeting passion. And then I met
   Cole. And Darian met Spencer, and
   their overriding love for each other
   was contagious. The difference being,
   mine and Cole’s has grown. Matured,
   even. Theirs seems destined to wither.
   I CAN’T BRING MYSELF
   To say it has already folded up
   into itself, passed away. But if
   Darian really believes she’s in love
   with someone else, she can’t still
   love Spencer, too. Can she? I curl
   my legs under me, watch her refill
   our drinks. Glad I’m staying over.
   I’m fuzzy-headed and an artificial
   warmth snakes through my body.
   I wait for her to hand me the glass
   before asking, “Who is it, Dar? Tell
   me about him.” She sits on the far
   end of the small loveseat, close
   enough so I can see her eyes. His
   name is Kenny, and I met him at
   a support group for military
   spouses. Not the one here on base.
   Too close to home pasture and all.
   I nod, feeling like an idiot, or at
   the very least, a semistranger.
   “So, his wife’s in the military?”
   Her turn to nod. Air Force. Intel.
   I guess Tara loves it. It “fulfills her,”
   she told Kenny. Sad, for her family.
   HER FAMILY?
   What is Darian thinking?
   “You mean, they’ve got kids?”
   Yep. Well, one. She’s fifteen.
   Wait. Fifteen? That makes
   her mother at least, what?
   Thirty-five? “How old is Kenny?”
   Don’t freak, okay? Forty-two.
   Seriously? What the hell?
   A Daddy fetish, or what? “Dar . . .”
   I know, I know. He’s old enough
   to be my father. He’s also smart
   and sweet and stable . . .
   “Stable? I hate to point this out,
   but he’s sleeping around on his
   wife.” Which brings me straight
   back to Dad, and Darian gets it.
   He’s nothing like your dad, Ash.
   I mean, it’s not like your mom
   was traveling the world, gathering
   intelligence for the U.S. of A.
   Not like she left you behind for
   your father to take care of while
   she was off playing spy. It was
   Tara’s choice to leave, not Kenny’s.
   Please don’t judge him. Or me.
   NOT MY PLACE
   To judge. Not my place to worry,
   really, except infidelity rarely turns
   out well, and last time I looked,
   Darian was still my best friend.
   “I’d just hate to see you get hurt.”
   Hurt? A little fucking late to worry
   about that now! Her jaw tightens
   and her violet-blue eyes flash anger.
   Want to know what hurt is? It’s . . .
   Her words puncture the space
   between us, fangs, but I want to hear
   the rest. “What is it? Tell me, Dar.”
   She considers. Shakes her head.
   Maybe someday. But not tonight.
 & 
					     					 			nbsp; Tonight is supposed to be fun.
   Wait. I know . . . She gets up, rushes
   down the hall to her bedroom.
   When she returns, she’s wearing
   red flannel pajamas. She offers a blue
   pair to me. Get comfy. Then we can
   play What If? Our old sleepover
   game. She goes to switch out CDs
   while I heard toward the bathroom
   to change, a little reluctant about
   her plan. What If? was a blast when
   we were in middle school. I’m not
   sure it’s such a great idea tonight.
   THE RULES ARE SIMPLE
   One of us asks a “What if”
   question. The other promises
   to answer truthfully. When
   we were kids, the questions
   were simple enough. Dar:
   What if the hottest guy in school
   tried to kiss you? She knew
   I was petrified my first kiss
   would totally suck, and guessed
   my answer: “I’d run the other way.”
   Or, from me: “What if your
   parents got divorced? Darian’s
   answer, in eighth grade: I’d
   help Mom find a nice man.
   In high school, the game got
   more complex. Freshman year,
   Dar: What if Matt tried to put
   the make on you? Matt was her
   new boyfriend. I’d crushed on
   him for over a year, and she knew it.
   As I considered my answer,
   it occurred to me that if things
   were reversed, I wouldn’t be going
   out with my best friend’s crush.
   In that moment, what I really
   wanted to say was, “I’d tell him
   let’s do it right here. And then,
   let’s do it where Darian can’t help
   but see us.” Okay, the closest
   I’d come to doing “it” was actually
   enjoying my first kiss. So when
   I said, “I’d deep throat him and
   walk away,” I meant I’d tease
   my tongue down his throat, zero
   follow-through, because Dar
   was my BFF, and I’d never mess
   with that. I swear, I had no idea
   “deep throat” could mean oral sex,
   but it did to Darian. Game over.
   It took several days to convince
   her of my naïveté, and only after
   she forgave me did I pause long
   enough to think that my best friend
   really should have known me better.
   ALL COMFY IN BLUE FLANNEL
   I hope for the best, return to
   the front room, where Darian
   and the Dixie Chicks are singing
   “Cowboy Take Me Away.”
   “Been a while since I’ve listened
   to Fly.” It was our favorite album
   in seventh grade. We even thought
   we might be the next Dixie Chicks—
   Darian taking lead with her fine,
   clear voice and me on guitar, doing
   harmonies. We drove our parents
   nuts, practicing over and over.
   It’s the perfect lead-in for our
   game. What if, Darian asks, we
   would have put together a band
   and gone on the rodeo circuit?
   We figured that was the easiest
   place to break in. Plus, Dar’s dad
   could give us rides to events. I mull
   over my answer. “If we’d actually made
   it on the circuit, you and your father
   would either totally hate each other
   by now or we’d be so rich and famous,
   he’d insist on being our manager.”
   She laughs. Pretty sure it would
   be the former. Or maybe both.
   Who knows? Okay. Your turn.
   She waits while I think of a question.
   I sip tequila, relish the crawl
   of heat. “What if you hadn’t broken
   up with Carson Piscopo?” They were
   everyone’s idea of the perfect
   couple for almost two years. Dar
   smiles. I’d be living in a trailer,
   chasing a pack of kids around
   while Carson sucked down beer.
   “He did like his Budweiser, didn’t
   he?” Not so unusual, of course.
   The majority of the football team
   overindulged, as do most Marines
   I know. Then again, any soldier
   worth his MREs deserves to relax
   when he can, with whatever. High
   school jocks? Not so much. Jeez,
   I’m showing my age. Dar clears
   her throat. What if Cole was around
   all the time? Like, if he wasn’t a Marine.
   Would you still love him as much?
   What a weird question. “Well,
   of course. Why wouldn’t I? I don’t
   love him because he’s a Marine.
   I love him . . .” Damn. I almost said
   in spite of it, and that isn’t right,
   either. It’s such a big part of who
   he is. “If he was around all the time,
   I’d have sex a lot more often.”
   WE BOTH LAUGH
   But now it’s time to get serious.
   This was her idea, but I’m ready to play
   tough. “What if you never met Spencer?”
   Then you wouldn’t have met Cole.
   “That’s not what I mean, Dar.”
   I know. Okay. First off, I wouldn’t
   be living at Camp Pendleton.
   Probably not even in San Diego.
   Grad school was never in her plans.
   I’m not even sure a degree was.
   She went to college to leave home.
   “But would you be happier?”
   She shrugs. Who knows? Things
   would be different, that’s all.
   Anyway, happiness is overrated.
   “You don’t mean that. What if . . .”
   Hey! she interrupts. It’s my turn.
   Um . . . As she contemplates her next
   question, the Dixie Chicks launch into
   “Goodbye Earl,” a song about two friends
   who feed poisoned black-eyed peas to
   the ex-husband whose fists put one
   of them in intensive care. So long,
   Earl. The song is half amusing, half
   scary as hell. Darian listens for a few
   seconds, then finally asks, What if
   Cole got drunk and hit you?
   She looks at me so earnestly, it spins
   the tiny warning lights inside my brain.
   “That would never happen. But if
   it did, I’d make sure it would never
   happen twice. I’d . . .” What? Have him
   arrested? Poison his black-eyed peas?
   Or would I, just maybe, chalk it up
   to the alcohol? The bigger issue is,
   “Are you talking from experience?”
   Her face flushes. She starts to say
   something. Closes her mouth.
   Shakes her head. Just wondered.
   There’s more there. A lot more,
   I’m guessing. “Darian, you’d tell
   me if somebody hit you, right?”
   Yeah, sure. Of course I would.
   This game is getting old. One
   more round, then I’ll call it quits.
   “What if Kenny left his wife?”
   Good question. What if I told
   you he’s already decided to?
   THIS ISN’T FUN ANYMORE
   I want to support my friend. Want
   her decisions to be sound. Why do
   I think those two things are opposing
   forces? “Would you please stop					     					 			r />
   the coy routine? What’s going on?”
   Look. I haven’t totally made up
   my mind, but I’m thinking about
   divorcing Spencer. I can’t tell him
   long distance, though. So I guess
   I’m stuck in limbo for now.
   “And if you decide to split up,
   will it be because of Kenny?”
   In a way. I didn’t fall out of love
   with Spencer because of Kenny.
   But I did fall in love with Kenny
   because of Spencer. Kenny treats
   me with respect. Simple as that.
   Sadness seeps into me. Through
   me. And still, “I guess I understand.
   I’m just sorry, you know?” I give her
   a hug. “I’m fading fast. Guest room?”
   She smiles. Clean sheets on the bed
   and everything. And there’s a new
   toothbrush in the medicine cabinet.
   Morning-after-tequila breath is brutal.
   As I start down the hall, she calls
   after me, So you know, I’m sorry, too.
   TIRED AND BUZZED
   Still, I find it hard to sleep.
   The bed is bigger and softer
   than mine. I sink down into
   the pillow top. Eyes closed,
   I could be afloat in a calm sea.
   Then up blows a wind. Spiraling
   impatience for the impermanent
   nature of love. Can it endure?
   Grow? Flourish? I love Cole more
   now than I did our first year
   together. Is it because I know
   him better—have investigated
   beyond exterior shine, discovered
   the facets underneath, strong,
   pure, impenetrable? I hear Darian.
   What if he was around all the time?
   Would seeing him every day change
   the way I feel? Is my heart fonder
   because of his absence? Does proximity
   breed discontent? The last thing
   I want is for Cole and me to become
   like my parents, one finding some
   slim measure of satisfaction in
   the other’s failures. But what about
   loyalty? Faithfulness? Promises kept?
   Would sharing a home make it less
   welcoming—to Cole, or to me?
   Rewind
   OUR FIRST YEAR TOGETHER
   Was mostly a year apart. At first,
   while Cole attended SOI, we saw
   each other when he got weekend liberty.
   Sometimes on base, other times off,
   but only if he wasn’t in the field, and only