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By S E T Those Shelter Island nights, When the air hung sweet and salty and the shell-laced, pebbly sand still felt jagged against your toughened feet, Inviting and profound You walked with your best guy friend, Tawny, and burnished from the summer side jobs, gap tooth and lightly nasal desperately wanting not to hear his yearning paens to your best, most glamorous friend lamenting her leaving Who'd been up for half the month, She of the glittering auburn hair and TV roles, and heartthrob drummer brother, and even then, deep, throaty laugh, Wondering if she'd go for hick, Long Island him, Instead, to feel his teen-age muscled lips bear down on yours, even if you fidgeted with desire and uncertainty, half-longing to bolt Never letting on that second fiddle was not your instrument of choice Crossing the warm road to (pinch yourself) board Chuck's yacht The only one you knew who had a yacht, not a grand affair, with modest galley and monk-like sleeper but a yacht no less, And drink the bootlegged verboten beer delicious, slightly acrid, Stealing away, out the kitchen door after the small stones clattered against your sleeping window, Your signal to renounce the troubled house for a midnight ride down paradise cove.
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Aug 28, 2016
Aug 28, 2016 at 5:15 PM UTC
Those Shelter Island Nights,
By S E T Those Shelter Island nights, When the air hung sweet and salty and the shell-laced, pebbly sand still felt jagged against your toughened feet, Inviting and profound You walked with your best guy friend, Tawny, and burnished from the summer side jobs, gap tooth and lightly nasal desperately wanting not to hear his yearning paens to your best, most glamorous friend lamenting her leaving Who'd been up for half the month, She of the glittering auburn hair and TV roles, and heartthrob drummer brother, and even then, deep, throaty laugh, Wondering if she'd go for hick, Long Island him, Instead, to feel his teen-age muscled lips bear down on yours, even if you fidgeted with desire and uncertainty, half-longing to bolt Never letting on that second fiddle was not your instrument of choice Crossing the warm road to (pinch yourself) board Chuck's yacht The only one you knew who had a yacht, not a grand affair, with modest galley and monk-like sleeper but a yacht no less, And drink the bootlegged verboten beer delicious, slightly acrid, Stealing away, out the kitchen door after the small stones clattered against your sleeping window, Your signal to renounce the troubled house for a midnight ride down paradise cove.
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Aug 28, 2016
Aug 28, 2016 at 5:15 PM UTC
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