Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
As I rode up to Milka's parents' farmhouse on my bike, Milka's mother was by the back door shaking out a carpet. I left my bike against a fence, and walked towards the back door, watching her standing there hands gripping the carpet and shaking determinedly, as she shook the carpet her whole body moved, and I took note of her motherly ******* bulging and swaying. She turned when she heard me coming over the stony path. Hello, Benny, she said, you're here early, Milka's not up yet, but still come in and have coffee or tea and maybe toast. I smiled and said: that'll be nice, and I followed her in as she carried the carpet back indoors again and took it into the lounge where it had come from. Take a seat, she said, I’ll get us a drink and some toast. So I sat down in a chair by the table in the kitchen, and she busied herself getting down mugs from a cupboard and putting slices of bread under the grill. What are you having? She asked me tea or coffee? Tea please, I said, watching her slightly plumpish body move before me. She put tea into a teapot and put the kettle onto the stove. She turned and said: what are you and Milka doing this fine Saturday? Going to show her the place I used to go fishing, I said. Fishing? Milka? didn't know she was into fishing? He mother said smiling. She's not, I said, but the spot is beautiful, and we could sit by the pond and watch the wildlife, and maybe take some sandwiches and drinks of pop and have a sort of picnic. O that sounds good, Milka's mother said. I said nothing about anything else we may get up to if the weather held and it stayed dry. She turned and made the tea and watched the bread under the grill. I watched her move about taking in her motherly ******* her Rubenesque figure. Just then Milka came down the stairs and into the kitchen in her dressing gown and her hair in a mess. You're here early, she said to me, make me some toast and a coffee please, Mum, she asked her mother, and sat down next to me. You could at least have washed and got dressed first Milka, her mother said looking at her frowning. Didn't know Benny was here, Milka said. Well he is, her mother said, so get yourself decent. Milka sighed and raised her eyes heavenward, and stomped off upstairs. That girl, Milka's mother said, just as well her father's not here or he'd give her coming down to breakfast like that, just as well he's up on the farm. She poured me a mug of tea and two slices of toast and butter, and sat down opposite me and said: you've a handful there, Benny, not an easy one to motivate into action. No I guess not, I said, keeping the image of Milka and me in her bed ******* away inside my head.
0
Sep 6, 2016
Sep 6, 2016 at 1:50 AM UTC
MILKA'S MOTHER AND ME 1964.
As I rode up to Milka's parents' farmhouse on my bike, Milka's mother was by the back door shaking out a carpet. I left my bike against a fence, and walked towards the back door, watching her standing there hands gripping the carpet and shaking determinedly, as she shook the carpet her whole body moved, and I took note of her motherly ******* bulging and swaying. She turned when she heard me coming over the stony path. Hello, Benny, she said, you're here early, Milka's not up yet, but still come in and have coffee or tea and maybe toast. I smiled and said: that'll be nice, and I followed her in as she carried the carpet back indoors again and took it into the lounge where it had come from. Take a seat, she said, I’ll get us a drink and some toast. So I sat down in a chair by the table in the kitchen, and she busied herself getting down mugs from a cupboard and putting slices of bread under the grill. What are you having? She asked me tea or coffee? Tea please, I said, watching her slightly plumpish body move before me. She put tea into a teapot and put the kettle onto the stove. She turned and said: what are you and Milka doing this fine Saturday? Going to show her the place I used to go fishing, I said. Fishing? Milka? didn't know she was into fishing? He mother said smiling. She's not, I said, but the spot is beautiful, and we could sit by the pond and watch the wildlife, and maybe take some sandwiches and drinks of pop and have a sort of picnic. O that sounds good, Milka's mother said. I said nothing about anything else we may get up to if the weather held and it stayed dry. She turned and made the tea and watched the bread under the grill. I watched her move about taking in her motherly ******* her Rubenesque figure. Just then Milka came down the stairs and into the kitchen in her dressing gown and her hair in a mess. You're here early, she said to me, make me some toast and a coffee please, Mum, she asked her mother, and sat down next to me. You could at least have washed and got dressed first Milka, her mother said looking at her frowning. Didn't know Benny was here, Milka said. Well he is, her mother said, so get yourself decent. Milka sighed and raised her eyes heavenward, and stomped off upstairs. That girl, Milka's mother said, just as well her father's not here or he'd give her coming down to breakfast like that, just as well he's up on the farm. She poured me a mug of tea and two slices of toast and butter, and sat down opposite me and said: you've a handful there, Benny, not an easy one to motivate into action. No I guess not, I said, keeping the image of Milka and me in her bed ******* away inside my head.
A boy and his girlfriend's mother in 1964.
TerryCollett
Written by
Sep 6, 2016
Sep 6, 2016 at 1:50 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem