So, you're in a Greek diner.
Let's call it The Flame, its
letters enscripted in neon
on the glass, and she's across
the booth drinking coffee and
reading your poems. Her hair is
raven and she is, in a way,
beautiful, someone who has
braved the depths of something
and returned arrogant, smart,
there's some faint smudge on her
forehead, the imprint of the moon,
as if she is touched by some
kind of love as she reads.
She reads each poem as if,
for a moment, she is stricken
by them, she writes a question
beside a line, jots a few
words at the bottom, So?,
A mood piece? and Oh.
She looks at you for the first
time and asks you what you
want. She flips her raven hair
over her shoulder. You cannot
say what comes to mind, you
want her to love your poems, or
you, the way you just now love
her, or think you do. What do
you want? she asks, and just
now you know nothing, nothing
that you can say, you don't
really know anything but
there are words tumbling
everywhere, she tells you
that you must change your life,
asks you if you're willing
to change your relationship
to language, to form? You want
to say something smart but
your mouth swells with twisting
flowers. You are floating in
indigo. The typed letters
shimmer on the page with
a trace of something you
can't quite decipher -- you're
smitten. You take the pages
and leave the booth. By
the time you reach the door
you think she's watching but
all you see is the window,
indigo on the glass, the
neon script of The Flame
and these flowers twisting
in your throat, petals spilling
from your lips, lavender and
mustard, ivory and lipstick,
the flush of becoming
someone you'll never know,
again.
1 comment:
Flowers twisting in your mouth: yes
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