Idaho
I must have been thinking of the night we walked
to the bar as snow fell through streetlights.
The door opened to a warm fug of smoke and beer.
I was too tired to drink, so I ate some pretzels,
watched the game on TV while you talked
to the bartender and the guys on the stools.
I hadn’t eaten for a while. My clothes were stiff.
The radio was playing a country song about a girl
who had taken off for Idaho.
When I was six, I could sing like an angel,
and I never shut up. When my voice changed,
the choir director told me to mouth the words,
and one day I showed up for rehearsal,
and they had moved away to another school.
I went out for tennis, joined the photography club,
but I didn’t have a camera or a racket, so they tossed
me
in the pool, and I came in second in the backstroke.
I always loved how the lunchroom tilted toward the sea.
Let’s Spend the Night Together
Cold night with snow blowing around the streetlight,
the road obscured and dark.
Why were we out on a night like this?
If I remember right, we walked through the park,
came out near a statue of the Virgin
at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs.
We watched her for a while,
marble white in the glow of a beam,
snow streaming around her upraised hands.
So quiet without the usual traffic noise.
By then we were hungry, stopped for a slice
at Rosalia’s, Rolling Stones on the jukebox,
“Let’s Spend the Night Together.”
We sang along, drumming with our fingers on the table,
and when we got up to go, a man spat out “Fucking
hippies!”
He sat in a booth alone. Turned out he was a neighbor,
one of the guys your father always beat at chess.
You smiled at him and waved.
“Teddy?” he said. “You go around like this?”
On the sidewalk a tired cop, ear flaps down on his fur
hat,
and two girls slipping, laughing in the cold,
breath rising like blessed souls above their shining hair.
Was that you?
Caught on the hook of a dream, I toss until light
wrenches me awake. Where was I sailing, on what
flat-bottomed boat?
Was that you, with bird’s wings and a feathery crown,
singing such rich notes as waves rolled me far from
shore?
Here in the north, wind blows fierce. It tears down tree
limbs, litters the yard
with shingles. Even crows struggle against strength that
bends pines to the wet grass.
But the mountains are wrapped in fog so deep they cannot be
seen,
only felt as a presence beyond the aspen trees.
I waited for you where the river bent and twisted
south.
I waited in the dark, hoping you would come with light in
your palms.
We were empty as our cups,
anxious to be filled again with wine.
Soon we were walking hand in hand, a little tipsy, a little
cold.
It was drizzling then, your hair flaked with shining drops
of rain.
Steve Klepetar lives in the Shire (Berkshire County, in Massachusetts, that is). His work has appeared widely and has received several nominations for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize. He is the author of fourteen poetry collections, including Family Reunion and The Li Bo Poems.
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