Saturday, June 28, 2014

Fast Food

       

They were sitting across the aisle in McDonald’s.I had meant to read some ‘Mules of Love’
with a Filet-o-Fish and the
card-carrying people watcher in me took over.

The couple appeared to be in their eighties;
she with fragile, pale, liver-spotted skin, thick bifocals
and stand-up off the forehead white hair
like the silk on fresh shucked corn.
Dressed in a sleeveless lime green blouse,
long white skirt with green and red polka dots
and a plastic pearl necklace with alternating beads
of the same colors.

He was ruddy, a too-red face under a gray crew cut;
a tan knit with a zipper placket
and Montgomery Ward’s shorts,
socks to the knees and tan Hush Puppies.

They sat facing each other, but their eyes never met
and I’d swear they never said a word.
She chewed her fries slow like cud,
he sipped his senior-discounted coffee,
and the stereotypes kicked in.

Dressed for an early dinner date.
Helped one another out of the apartment.
Going back home to TV [no cable],
the afternoon news, in bed by dusk.
At that age how sweet to have someone
to do for and have done.

He got up slowly and disposed of her trash.
They left with the smallest of steps.
Ellen Bass grinned at me from the back of her book
with a slight curled lip at such pre-judgements,
wondering why fast food and not the sushi bar.

Our exiting lunch-liners exchanged pecks on the parking lot,
she with her hand on his cheek, and drove off in separate cars
and opposite directions.
I glanced back at Ellen and assured her that we’d just had
an extra-value meal that didn’t need super-sizing.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Boardwalk Bijou

     
The morning bicyclers were not out yet
and dunes hid me, hungover, half asleep.
I knew she could not see me watching them
as they came to the boardwalk hand in hand,
a grandmother with a child about four.

Her gray hair blended with the gray of dawn
and took a hot rose frost from the red tinge
of first light bouncing off the purple clouds.
She sat the child formally on the bench
as though ushered into a theatre,
folding her hands in delicate white gloves,
her pocketbook carefully in her lap.

The new sun free above the horizon -
the bench now small against the grandeur of
a bonfire sky on molten metal waves –
a tear reflects like mirror on her cheek,
“I made the trip so you wouldn’t miss this”,
the girl yawns early blue eyes at our show.
I warm to an all-encompassing gold
and the maternal heat of a new day.





Thursday, June 12, 2014

Cocktails at the McCafferty's

  


Polo and Marcy
announce their engagement.
Edwardo demonstrates his backhand.
Bishop Sheen glares
smilingly over his mint iced tea,
and as the olive turns
in my stomach
I spill martini
on my new flannel pants.
Molly becomes concerned.

Closing her Chippendale eyes
she wraps her Andalusian lips
around the stain
and I remember,
tongue in cheek,

why I had agreed to come.

Saturday, June 7, 2014

Blue Notes

     


Jazz pulsed,
permeated the room,
melted it out of focus,
unimportant, unaware,
banter drifting into unintelligible
tapping of cowbell and snare.

The flute shooting blonde lava,
bass thumping in my loins -
the candles,
your lips and eyes,
quivered across the table
as the shadows soothed soft cleavage,
and hair stroked with molten honey
caressed your cheeks,
oozed lightly onto your shoulders.

We sipped martinis
with pointed tongues.
The waiter, arms folded,
patiently and to the beat
tapping his right forefinger
against his left forearm
couldn’t ask us to order,

wouldn’t interrupt.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Clementine and Cleopatra



In the middle of the sale
she fell dead asleep.
There was a chance of showers
so I let her rest - no toothbrush,
and now it’s noticed no umbrella,
just the set of new encyclopedias
on the coffee table
opened to the ‘C’s.

Perhaps a stepmother cruelly treated her,
forced her to sell to exhaustion –
now she naps -
a petite princess, maybe a 5 and a half,
looking magically submissive,
trusting her new customer
like one would a godmother
and obviously the weather.

When she awakes I’ll introduce her
to my neighbor – a psych major - he’s her age,
single and has a foot fetish.
I’ll make sure she leaves
a navy pump in his room
so that he can find her right foot
and determine the dynamics
of her dysfunctional domicile.

I know he’ll fall in love –
he always does -
and perhaps marry our door-to-door coquette,
piss off the stepsisters, get the books for free,
loan them to me until he needs them.
I want to finish the Cinderella story
and am looking forward to
Clementine and Cleopatra.