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I wanted to meet you outside the National Gallery, Julie says, but the doctors weren't keen, said I ****** up my drug medication, and not let me out for days. She was a drug dependent, on the cure, or so she said. And waiting you went to Dobells's record shop, listened to few jazz LPs, had a beer, sat and smoked, thought about *** the having and not so. Then she shows, her dark hair neat, pony-tailed, her tight figure in the clothes she wears, **** almost touchable. Let's skip the old stuff, she says, let's keep to the modern **** save time, energy, then after a drink and chat. So you go in the Gallery, take in all those moderns, the stuff she likes, the portraits, the brush skills involved, who painted whom, buy a few postcards, look at books. Then off for a coffee and chat, you go to some place in Leicester Square, sit at a table, take out the cigarettes, wait for the order, take in her features as she speaks, her eyes, her lips, the way her hair is brushed and kept, her tight top, those pressing out of **** I liked the Picasso, she says, his stuff really gets to me, makes other works boring as last year's ***** You notice how she holds her cigarette, the fingers not yet browny yellow, hold it just so, not tight or loose, but gently, like it was some baby kid instead of tobacco filled paper deadly drug. The coffees come, neat small cups, tiny handles, froth and such. I feel the need, she says,all the time that need to hit the veins or tongue. You hear her words, out there, fragile things, taking flight, like doomed black birds.
0
Nov 12, 2013
Nov 12, 2013 at 1:58 AM UTC
LIKE DOOMED BLACK BIRDS.
I wanted to meet you outside the National Gallery, Julie says, but the doctors weren't keen, said I ****** up my drug medication, and not let me out for days. She was a drug dependent, on the cure, or so she said. And waiting you went to Dobells's record shop, listened to few jazz LPs, had a beer, sat and smoked, thought about *** the having and not so. Then she shows, her dark hair neat, pony-tailed, her tight figure in the clothes she wears, **** almost touchable. Let's skip the old stuff, she says, let's keep to the modern **** save time, energy, then after a drink and chat. So you go in the Gallery, take in all those moderns, the stuff she likes, the portraits, the brush skills involved, who painted whom, buy a few postcards, look at books. Then off for a coffee and chat, you go to some place in Leicester Square, sit at a table, take out the cigarettes, wait for the order, take in her features as she speaks, her eyes, her lips, the way her hair is brushed and kept, her tight top, those pressing out of **** I liked the Picasso, she says, his stuff really gets to me, makes other works boring as last year's ***** You notice how she holds her cigarette, the fingers not yet browny yellow, hold it just so, not tight or loose, but gently, like it was some baby kid instead of tobacco filled paper deadly drug. The coffees come, neat small cups, tiny handles, froth and such. I feel the need, she says,all the time that need to hit the veins or tongue. You hear her words, out there, fragile things, taking flight, like doomed black birds.
SET IN LONDON IN 1967.
terry-collett
Written by
Nov 12, 2013
Nov 12, 2013 at 1:58 AM UTC
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