Something She’s Not Saying
A courtyard patio lit by heatlamps.
Muffled conversations mixed with songbirds
in the air, a jazz trio in the corner.
Down the street buskers play the same tunes
but with more urgency. All have tip jars
but those in the courtyard will be paid
anyway.
I
much prefer cellos, she says to the man
who is trying to make a good impression.
What can he offer to that piece of
conversation
other than try this delicious poached lobster
as he lifts a fork to her lips, an offer to
share
even though he does not like sharing.
He’s had so many lucky breaks
but this woman, in a dress red as rage,
will not be another notch in his belt.
They finish their dinner as the early stars
come on slowly, night air scented
with her perfume mixed with the sea.
And then she’s gone with stunning grace.
She touches his cheek, touches his lips,
walks slowly backwards into the dark.
A Slice of Lourdes
Lourdes lay in a hospital bed in some city
between her beloved desert and the sea. She could hear the rain but couldn’t
see it, nor could she smell any smells besides the sprays used by the cleaners.
It was hard to breathe until they floated away from her, swirling on the ground
until the next time. The nurses were brutal and spoke a language she didn’t
understand.
Lourdes was bruised and sore as a ripe peach. Again and again she drifted off to the heavy winter light of the Mojave. Late afternoon winds blowing rust like a penny fallen on trampled fields. Often she felt like a trampled field herself. Nothing to do but close her eyes and pray for the wind to end in star-sprinkled night.
Every morning she woke to stillness, an incoming tide, thoughts of driftwood floating from ships broken on angry seas just as she felt broken—a dinghy come unmoored from a rotted tether. She tries to name her room home but it isn’t. Home is where he is, her liberator—gentle kisses, words with the buoyancy of seaside grasses, dreamy dreams, no pain to wrack the body into stillness. She cannot wait to go home, inhabit her own landscape, breathe untouched air in the waking light.
King Cake
She realized she’d lost his ring
one quiet morning, when fog
muscled in from the sea.
When outside sounds were muffled
and even the sounds of her
riffling through papers and memories
were near to silent, like ghost-tiptoes
on wooden floors.
Was it a vital possession,
well yes it was. She’d twist it like
a worrystone on a palm lined with
questions,
like a magic eight-ball, like cards
by the tarot reader in her tiny turquoise
house in front of the rental car agency
where people pawned their rides
for ones in shadow.
Did she have it to ward off the ladies
in front of the Korean market,
the ones who passed out bible verses
and hand sanitizer for cleanliness of soul,
what an odd combination—she couldn’t
remember.
Did she have it at the Goodwill
where she nabbed a dress dropped off
by a woman in a Tesla,
cold cotton against her warm cheek.
But that ring, with the tiny diamond
and the giant promise she’s never broken
and neither has he, did she feel it brush
against her with that dress, perfectly
functional,
ridiculously non-worn, and somewhat
spiteful
in the tossing, did she feel the ring
she couldn’t say. Under oath she couldn’t
say.
Like the lucky slice of King cake
the ring turned itself up
and even that was a mystery.
Sorrowful cello music was playing
and there it was. The cello turned
graceful,
she stood like stone, time moving backwards
and forwards and backwards again,
her relieved laughter gambling with tears.
At the Country House One Sunday in Summer
Pears and honey
des poires et de
miel
sweetness
that transcends
a language meant to know in the bones
as I know in my bones –
Words, words,
qu’est-ce qu’on dit
the words to explain exquisite completeness
When is a glance not a glance, but
a living history, a hand to the cheek,
viens ici, the crust of a bread
cracks the family tree. Salt.
No salt.
I can afford to keep you
or
I can’t.
Let’s have some sugar let me taste
from your lips the things we do not say.
I have a green dress.
You see my legs through the silk.
They are not frightened they are
one,
two, strong and standing
in front of you a dare, not an
acquiescence.
Write me a letter
en français, peut-etre
en anglais it does not matter. I want
to feel each stroke of the pen
as
if a caress.
Des poires et de
miel behind glass.
An antique table and Mozart in the
courtyard –
a window so high we don’t know
if it’s someone playing or
an
old fashioned phonograph.
Gentle the pins from my hair, your large
hand finds
the back of my neck, a sweet kiss,
another
crust of bread,
Let’s stir the coffee and grow old.
At
the Country House was previously published in Spoon River Poetry Review in
2009.
Tobi
Alfier is published nationally and internationally. Credits include War,
Literature and the Arts, The American Journal of Poetry, KGB Bar Lit Mag,
Washington Square Review, Cholla Needles, James Dickey Review, Gargoyle,
Permafrost, Arkansas Review, Anti-Heroin Chic, and others. She is
co-editor of San Pedro River Review (www.bluehorsepress.com).
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