Lie Back in My Arms
Lie back in my arms.
Let your wasted bones
melt into me like butter
into batter,
batter the color
of the crusty corners
of your always-open
mouth.
Let me relish
your stale muddy
breath as your
cabled limbs sink
into my flesh
until I’ve absorbed
you completely.
Long ago, my dear,
you’d sit above me
holding yourself up
with young muscles,
shifting forward and back,
your breasts breaking
like easy waves
under an early sky.
Husbands
The trouble with husbands
is they’re always there.
You chat with a woman at a party
and who pops up but this square
dressed in a blond goatee and Sox cap.
“I’m Jimmy!” he insists, shooting his hand at me.
And you don’t doubt that for a sec:
Jimmy he is and Jimmy he’ll always be.
You have a quiet cup with an old dear
and her cell phone rings four times in half
an hour. “He’s a little wary,” she says,
“I should put it on vibrate,” she adds with a laugh,
“There’d be some percentage in that, at least.”
With age, my fabulous stable, my fleet fillies,
are all tethered to some devoted good person
and I’m left trotting on my own flat feet.
O, for the days when husbands were boyfriends!
Before they were grooms, they’d do the grooming,
and I was the midnight rider! Ha! Now it’s a struggle
to steal a kiss from the old mares, a bleak thing
that. A meeting of licked lips, a tip of tongue,
the rumour of a breast against my chest.
Not really worth the effort or the money,
in some dark bar, paying more and more for less and less.
Cathexis
Garnet was my mother’s birthstone
It’s in the semi-precious category,
not as hard, not as bright as a ruby.
Not as precious but just as fine –
a supple red blush.
She wore a largish one in a smallish brooch.
It was rectangular and clawed into place
by the insect legs of some metal –
semi-precious perhaps, but perhaps not,
perhaps gold, a noble metal that endures.
She only wore the brooch when she went out.
I observed her toilette with pious intensity:
two swipes of deep red lipstick on her lower lip
then pressing both lips together with a casual élan.
She’d peer in her compact mirror
then clap it shut, releasing ecstatic puffs of powder,
before holding the compact up to my face
saying, “See the monkey!”
I laughed but was always a little surprised
that I didn’t see her face in the glass but her
pale, shy child shadow.
Alec Solomita is a writer and artist working in the Boston (USA)
area. His fiction has appeared in the Southwest Review, The Mississippi Review, Southword
Journal, and Peacock, among other publications. He was shortlisted
by the Bridport Prize and Southword Journal. His poetry has appeared in Poetica,
Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Litbreak, Driftwood Press, Anti-Heroin Chic, The
Galway Review, The Lake, and elsewhere, including several anthologies. His
photographs and drawings can be found in Convivium, Fatal Flaw, Young
Ravens Review, Tell-Tale Inklings, and other publications. He took
the cover photo and designed the cover of his poetry chapbook, “Do Not Forsake
Me,” which was published in 2017. His full-length poetry book “Hard To Be a
Hero,” will be coming out in spring of next year.
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