Ten
Mother would teach me a lesson
for wandering in after midnight
after closing time, after curfew
after “God only knows what...”
my punishment this time would be
the Pit, New Year’s Eve
with her husband, my father—or so she says—
although you and I
are nothing alike
your eyes are brown and bulging
wrinkled like linen
snagged by barbed wire brows
substantial bulbous nose
knotty, pointed chin
prematurely overgrown
with salt and pepper stubble
Nine
I stumble along behind you
eyeballs racing to the back of my head
the parking lot, lit by swirling cigarettes, is pitch
except where light pools in cracked asphalt
and bounces off spilled oil
I stall against your prized black Ford
leaning tower of apathy
you say nothing
and for once I am grateful
for your silence
I keep in tow
head down
blouse buttoned to the collar
Eight
the Pit is tiny windows, low ceilings, sparse decoration
sticky vinyl seats, thickly lacquered tables
dry with generated heat, coils ready to spring
sweat beading on the trumpeter’s forehead
dripping down the singer’s cheeks and
off the saxophonist’s wrists
over the lipsticked lips
of the girls who kiss the boys
headed for Krakow at dawn --
your music is breathing
alive
infectious
dizzying
delirious
hard to resist
Seven
merrymakers stage a mutiny
they reach for your hand and
you reach mine
and suddenly we are dancing, dancing, dancing:
Charleston, Jitterbug, Foxtrot, Swing—you know them all
Six
I head to the bar
grab us a few beers
muscle my way to our corner table
where the only trace of you is a crisp cocktail napkin
and a limp Gin Fizz
your smile surprises me
like an old friend walking through the kitchen door
unannounced
after 15 years --
I never knew
you could Shimmy
with one leg
Five
from the dance floor that distant smile of yours
radiates more heat
than the heating duct
blowing stale air
down the nape of my perspiring neck
Four
in need of a second wind
I sip the first cold beer
and then the second
watching you
shimmy-rock
around the clock
Three
suddenly
it’s 11:59 p.m.
and
I
am
making
my
way
to you
through
the
rambunctious
crowd
and
I
am
afraid
I
will
not
reach
you
in time
I have wasted so much already
Two
Late
the clock strikes 12
midnight ushers in
Auld Lang Syne
and a rainstorm of confetti
kissing couples
blasting noisemakers
billowing balloons
rowdy applause
for what has come to pass
and what is yet to come --
your eyes find mine
through the merriment
and you are looking
right at me
smiling, nodding
raising a pretend champagne glass,
toasting the New Year
One
I smile back,
raising a toast
to my father
***
Copyright © 04/16/1993 by Christy Munson. All rights reserved.
About the Creator
Christy Munson
My words expose what I find real and worth exploring.
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Unofficial Challenge Winners:
Homecoming | Ask Me in December | Story of Humanity | Strangely Art


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