Operatic
Betty nursed her drink but Don downed his in two gulps. She’d dieted back
to the hourglass figure she’d had when they’d been married and Don had already
had four or five penis-swells. He felt he had his love machine under control,
but he poured himself another drink to help him shut it all down. The Barber of
Seville played too loudly on the hi fi. Neither of them liked opera, (Betty had
chosen it for effect) but the moment was too fraught with sexual tension for
either of them to feel comfortable enough to get up, move across the vast
living room to the turntable and turn the music off or at least down. Betty’s
husband, Henry, was due to arrive any minute. A gust of wind blew in the open
French doors, and Betty’s portrait was knocked slightly askew. “Shoot,” she said, “I’ll have to straighten that.” But she didn’t move.
Hogshead
She dreamt of having a hogshead of wine, 63 gallons of it, all to herself.
The tricks would be soon over then, she thought. She sang, “There is a girl in
New York City who calls herself the human trampoline,” but forgot the next
line, and so hummed “Graceland” for some wobbly bars. If wishes were horses
beggars would ride and I’d be drunk on a hogshead of wine. Hogshead. A word to
use in a poem, she thought. She’d lost poems, though. The hoops in her ears
were huge, as hoops go, but she’d never caught one on a zipper. Not once. Who
will benefit from my expertise next? My expertise has come down in the world,
she thought. I used to have better thoughts, she thought. A PT Cruiser pulled
up and the guy rolled down his window. Well, this will be something new, she
thought. My first PT Cruiser.
Dream
Clare and I waited for
him at the New York Port Authority. We stood together at the bottom of the long
escalator, because the buses from Washington, D.C., came in upstairs and he’d
have to descend, so it was a good place to spot him. I was keeping her company,
really. Frank, Clare and my brother were the friends, more than friends. I
thought Clare loved them both and they loved her. I was a little younger, but a
little means a lot sometimes. After a half hour’s wait, we saw him coming down
the escalator, wearing a dark blue wool overcoat that hung to his ankles. His
blonde hair grown long and gorgeous, uncombed, rebellious. A guitar case hung
from a strap slung over his shoulder. In one hand he carried a duffel bag and
in the other a cigarette. Did he smoke in high school? We went into the grungy
restaurant on the first floor of the sprawl of bus station and drank cups of
coffee and dragged on cigarettes. They talked about Vietnam, music, civil
rights, peace marches. I was a ballet dancer, but I had ideas, too, I thought.
Frank went downtown with Clare and I went uptown to the apartment I shared with
uptight Miranda, a piano student. I had a dream that night that Frank chose me,
wanted me, came to me. My dreams never amounted to anything except that one
time, because the next afternoon Frank showed up at my door and took me to bed.
Only that one time and all these years later, I remember.
CP
Nonnie Augustine’s first collection
of poems, One Day Tells its Tale to Another was chosen by Kirkus Review as one of the
"Best of Indie 2013." Her poetry and fiction have appeared online and
in print at The Amsterdam Quarterly,
Tupelo Press, The Mad Hatter’s Review, The Linnet’s Wings, and others. She
is a frequent contributor to 2paragraphs.com
and can be found online at http://www.augustinesconfessions.blogspot.com
and http://www.nonnieaugustine.com.
1 comment:
Really fine work, Nonnie. Really good choice(s), Barry
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