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j-carl-white
Irish
Saturday Afternoon. He sweeps the honey-colored floor of the living-room and when he reaches the window, he sees me and waves, makes a silly face so I’ll laugh. Outside in the garden I rake leaves into heaps of copper and gold. I’m wearing gloves that don’t fit and a ridiculous woolen hat. In a black and white blur, our dog darts out from under the rose bush where she’s been curled and flies through the open front door. She barks at the broom as it crosses the floor making dust clouds that hang in the air like wintry breaths. We exchange glances as we watch the prancing antics of our dog, aware how happiness really can be as simple as this. Though no words are said, we are smiling, both our heads nodding in lovely, silent agreement.
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Jan 19, 2014
Jan 19, 2014 at 2:24 AM UTC
Saturday Afternoon
Awakened in a strangers bed by a breeze through a skylight dusting traces of rained-on geraniums and newly cut grass across my face. My lips taste like salt-rimmed margaritas when I lick them and the flames from giant candles that danced and flung our mad leaping shadows against the walls the night before have all blazed out, cried themselves into waxy puddles overflowing into a stolen hotel ashtray full of half-smoked cigarettes. The comforter slides off, silk whispering as it pools on the floor and I am naked beneath, hips dotted with tiny bruises from fingertips, hairy belly still sticky with release and I wonder what possessed me hours earlier to so savage the worm, that ridiculous prize lying at the bottom of a tequila bottle. I could die of thirst. I spy our spent casings on the night table and remember. Thrown clothes, then skin. Reloading during the battle. The hot breath of secrets over a white-flag pillow when the cease-fire came. Then no sounds at all. Adrift in a shamble of blankets, sleepy kisses till dawn. I hear the shower turn off and remorse sets in making me wish hard for mints, a better memory than this, the removal from my chest of that hive of angry bees grieving a dead queen, and God only knows who’ll walk through the door so I brace myself. Wrapped in sheets, I wait.
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Jan 18, 2014
Jan 18, 2014 at 10:29 PM UTC
One Night Standstill