Lying at a funeral
When I let everyone know
I would be going on this mission past Mars,
I knew there was no coming home.
I knew it was the last time I would see anyone.
I knew it would be the last time
I smelled someone,
or felt their skin touch mine,
hear a laugh,
felt lips press against my own.
But,
I didn’t tell anyone that.
What I told them was
how great an adventure it would be,
how I imagined explorers of days gone by must have felt.
While I knew there was a degree of naïveté to it all
—we all knew that—
it was harder to know I lied to everyone.
It’s hard to know I lied about being scared.
It’s hard to know the things I wanted to say,
wanted to tell everyone.
It’s hard to carry with me that I lied about it all
and there’s no way to change it.
When the booster jets fired,
I watched everyone die.
I watched them blink out in the distance
and they became memories.
I lied on their deathbeds.
I lied so much the lie became truth.
And now,
here I am
a mess of skin and bones in a metal ball
sending what will probably end up being
useless
information
back to a planet I left behind
and to whom I can never apologize.