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             In all that time, I never said even a
              hello to them. 
              They'd jog side by side 
              from the Verrazano Bridge along the bay
              to the Sixty-Ninth Street Pier, 
              where they'd fall into each other's
              arms and rest for a while, 
              before jogging back to the bridge. 
              And the next day they'd jog again, 
              coming and going like some kind
            of morning tide. 
            But day by day a distance grew between
              them, 
              so what was once a side by side effort turned into a tandem
              run, 
              with each keeping an individual pace. 
              Then one day they both reached
              the usual point, 
              halfway between where they came from and where
              they were going to, 
              but at their own separate time. 
              They didn't embrace, 
              for one needed a pause to rest, 
              while the other was rested and needed
              to move on. 
              Soon after they stopped even the pretense of jogging
              together. 
              Finally they were gone from my sight and memory. 
            But one afternoon
                while driving along the FDR drive, I saw her familiar face. 
              She
            was dressed for jogging, 
            but was walking alone very slowly along the
            riverside path, 
            while the whitecaps of the East River below were furious
            and swift. 
            And one morning months later, I saw him by the lower bay. 
              He was sitting
              alone on the pier 
              but somehow managed to pick my usual waterside bench. 
              And in that
            early morning, 
            his eyes followed the path from bridge to pier and
            back again. 
            But there was no couple running together to watch. 
            And like it had
              always been with me, 
              the current in the bay was strong and fast, 
              the gulls loudly cried
              overhead, 
              and immigrant fishermen mumbled, 
              some in Spanish, some in Russian. 
            And always the ships, 
            the ships passing 
            under that graceful bridge, 
            some arriving. Some departing, 
            some seeming never to move. 
                         
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