As the Aperture Opens Wide
No
baggage and no contrition.
Unsure,
am I
careless or careful?
The mesh
of a fishnet boundary
slyly
maneuvered.
Tattered
edges,
an
invitation for bad intentions.
Aware,
I am pandering
to danger,
like
Hermes chasing Melinoe,
I find
the distraction
of shimmering
images
and
light
through
champagne,
more
fascinating
than embellished
dreams.
I welcome
the tussle
as the
swell matures
and my
chin
parts the
sweet flesh
of smooth
legs.
The hourglass
reminds us
that causes
and cures are clouds in motion.
I am no
fool,
I realize
pity has its laws.
Yet,
there is a spurring curiosity
for contradictions.
An
appetite
to hear tolling
bells
while pleasure
beckons.
I love
the
lingering scent of perfume,
on inner thighs,
as eyes,
with disapproving
approval,
question
a thirst never quenched.
There is
a tiny white stitch
deep
within the silky black barrier.
A
twilight
never to
be reached.
Thoughts gather,
for temptation
is but a blindfold
over a threshold
moist
with deceptions.
While
Hera sees Aphrodite in her mirror,
I follow
the white line.
A
pantomime villain disguised as a seducer.
The visual
changes,
but the intention
remains.
Nakedness
opens a world of metaphors
and,
with a
cruel delight,
the
obvious becomes addictive.
But
redemption
is a dark
shadow on a forgotten gravestone,
never
charming
lines of poetry
applauding
dreamy stars.
In a
world devoid of purpose,
promotional
gestures
bring meaning
to nonsense.
I regale
the fragrance
of an
ageless mystery.
Legs
become scissors
and I giggle
to myself
as the aperture
opens
wide.
The phone rings.
It is her,
She asks, "Do you have company?"
I say, "No."
The car lights flash in the windows.
The dogs bark.
She is at the door.
I say, "Hi."
The cheek kiss.
Awkward moments.
"White wine?" I ask.
"Rum and coke."
I say, "Sure."
My heartbeats
seem louder than my voice.
"How are you?" she asks.
I say, "Fine."
How does it happen?
Two people who tangled in bed for years,
loved intimately,
kissed passionately,
touched feverishly,
spoke sincerely
now sit across from each other
hoping for wanted forgiveness.
Fair skin, big brown eyes, long legs,
and a dress a bit too short, she enters my
purgatory.
She whirls my emotions, and the sting reminds me
that I still love her.
I want it to be then- years ago,
with Christmas cheer
and joy punctuated with smiles after every word.
But I know her rehearsed movements,
her impatience with things not in her control.
"You look thinner."
I say, "Really?"
She sighs, "Why
aren't you out?"
I look
deep into her.
Deeper
than eyes can penetrate.
Passion
is the cruellest emotion.
It's the
animal whose jaw never releases its prey.
"Why
are you here?" I ask.
"I
have met someone younger than us.
He's my
beautiful indulgence
like you
were many years ago when we met.
But I
can't let you go.
Once, you
said you would die for me.
I need
that.
The
clutter of the past means recognizing the familiar.
I turn up
the music, sweet jazz, listenable jazz,
jazz, she
never quite grasped.
She was a
country girl,
quick to
memorize lyrics
and expects
you to be grateful.
Her
perfume lingers,
though
she has left.
Which is more uncomfortable,
the silence under the music, the
loneliness, or the request?
My
thoughts pace,
too
frightened to be definitive.
Forgive
and forget
must
separate
and
only one
word can resound.
I spend time going from one dream
to another.
They become unlocked tourists
asking permission to leave.
The phone
rings.
It is
her.
She asks
if I have company.
I say,
"No."
The car lights flash in the windows.
The dogs bark.
She is at the door.
I say, "Welcome."
The cheek kiss.
Awkward moments.
"Rum and coke?" I ask.
She says, "A double."
"How are you?" I ask.
"Good. How are you?" She asks politely.
I pick up one of the dogs, the dachshund,
He presses his head to my chest
as if listening to my heartbeat.
"I'm dying," I say with a snicker.
She collects the white and brown Shih Tzu
and places him in the chair she has just vacated.
Her movements are calm and deliberate.
She selects a framed photo of us
taken when the sun shone
even in winter.
She opens a drawer
placing it under an older photo of us.
Her car's rear lights flash in the windows.
I take her untouched drink and bring it to my lips
recalling,
"Every truth starts with a fantasy."
Philip Butera received his M.A. in Psychology from Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada. He has published five books of poetry, Mirror Images and Shards of Glass, Dark Images at Sea, I Never Finished Loving You, Falls from Grace, Favour, and High Places, and Forever Was Never On My Mind. Two novels, Caught Between (Which is also a 24-episode Radio Drama Podcast
https://wprnpublicradio.com/caught-between-teaser/)
and Art and Mystery: The Missing Poe Manuscript. His next book,
an erotic thriller, Far From Here, will be out in the Winter of 2023.
One play, The Apparition. His current project is collaborating with a
British photographer, a French artist, and an American graphic artist to
produce a coffee table titled Breathing Life into Thought. Philip also
has a column in the quarterly magazine Per Niente. He enjoys all things
artistic.
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