III. Symmetrical Companion – May Swenson

It must be

there walks somewhere in the world

another

another namely like me

Not twin

but opposite

as my two hands are opposite

Where are you

my symmetrical companion?

Do you inhabit

the featureless fog

of the future?

Are you sprinting

from the shadows of the past

to overtake me?

Or are you camouflaged

in the colored present?

Do I graze you every day

as yet immune to your touch

unaware of your scent

inert under your glance?

Come to me

Whisper your name

I will know you instantly

by a passport

decipherable to ourselves alone

We shall walk uniformed

in our secret

We shall be a single reversible cloak

lined with light within

furred with dark without

Nothing shall be forbidden us

All bars shall fall before us

Even the past shall be lit behind us

and seen to have led

like two predestined corridors

to the vestibule of our meeting

We shall be two daring acrobats

above the staring faces

framed in wheels of light

visible to millions

yet revealed only to each other

in the tiny circular mirrors

of our pupils

We shall climb together

up the frail ladders

balancing on slender

but steel-strong thongs of faith

When you leap

my hands will be surely there

at the arc's limit

We shall synchronize

each step of the dance upon the wire

We shall not fall

as long as our gaze is not severed

Where are you

my symmetrical companion?

Until I find you

my mouth is locked

my heart is numb

my mind unlit

my limbs unjointed

I am a marionette

doubled up in a dark trunk

a dancer frozen

in a catatonic sleep

a statue locked

in the stone

a Lazarus wrapped

in the swaddling strips

not of death

but of unborn life

a melody bound

in the strings of the viol

a torrent imprisoned

in ice

a flame buried

in the coal

a jewel hidden

in a block of lava

Come release me

Without you I do not yet exist

--

"As long as you're trying to be good, you can do whatever you want."

"And as long as you're not trying, you can say whatever you want."

"So between us, we can do anything. We can rule the world!"

House can't pinpoint the moment he became interested in Wilson, and God knows he's tried to figure it out. He wants to stop it. It's dangerous, for both of them. For Wilson because, no matter what he might say, he doesn't really want people at the hospital to know that he occasionally sleeps with men or shaves his legs or wears chiffon or whatever it else House lets him hide from him. And it's dangerous for House because he knows it's bound to change things, and no matter how unhappy he may be, he can't be bothered to learn a new way of being and he can't afford to push Wilson away. Logically, he knows it wouldn't matter if he could convince himself that everything stemmed from that day long ago when Wilson wore the green tie and French shoes for some random nurse or from stolen sandwiches and juvenile pranks. How would that help? But he still wants to know. Maybe then, he could control it.

"Lunch?" Wilson asks when he pops his head into House's office.

"Mexican."

"Italian?"

"Greek."

"Pita Palace?"

"Fine."

House doesn't have to stare at Wilson's face as he tries to figure out what's so special about him, but he does any way, knowing that it bugs Wilson. He counts the number of times his friend wipes imaginary smudges from his face (6) and the number of times he runs his tongue over his teeth to check for food (4).

"What's up?" Wilson finally asks, frowning as he reaches for his wallet, as House makes a show of ignoring the check.

House won't say anything. It's Wilson's job to tell House how he's feeling, especially if he's feeling like shit. But it's been a quiet day and Wilson doesn't have anything to go on, so instead House talks about work. Like it's not obvious.

Just before leaving him at the door to his office, Wilson tells him that he signed the papers.

"Now you can finally make an honest man of me," House answers, making a swift exit from the conversation before Wilson can joke about it.

By the end of the day, his leg is killing him and he's gone through too much Vicodin to be asking for more, but that doesn't stop him. And it never stops Wilson from writing for him. Only at his most self-destructive does House bring that up. And it's been a quiet day.

"Ah, assisted suicide. I'm so glad I picked an oncologist," he says as he shakes his new bottle of pills, wanting to shove his Pavlovian response in Wilson's face. He knows he's being particularly cruel. Knows that Wilson lost a long-time patient yesterday, one that had been in too much pain for far too long. Knows that Wilson still feels guilty for his part in the detox bet. But he can't help himself.

"I'm still the beneficiary of your will, right?" Wilson asks, but House knows that it stung. And he wonders why he doesn't just come out and tell Wilson that he wants him, if he's so hell bent on pushing him away anyway.