Mozzy Timeline #13
It was the one thing I
have to thank you for,
When the crush hung heavy as cigarette smoke
filling up your dad's old Oldsmobile.
Yves St. Laurant, you always wanted to be French.
I always wanted to die by your side.
A double-decker bus, a ten ton truck,
the pleasure would be mine, we sang
and drove nowhere at 17.
Yearbooks of good
intentions sit dusty.
Each new boyfriend has questioned your
name and entry, I simply smile - this charming man.
I'm sure the phone number you wrote
in faded ink now leads to nowhere at 28.
The light went out
eventually, I heard through the years
you married. I was always awaiting your closet opening.
A dear friend has met her, says she looks like me
and I'm wondering if you can sleep without a night-light.
The other day I pondered
if you ever play your old vinyl.
The maroon self titled, I can see it on your player.
(The one on top is always most played.)
The static hissing off the needle as we fall back
into your bed like an over-rated drama flick.
I miss those days, but we will never go back to the old house.
We never will.
Years pass, I think of you
less and less.
New memories cloud over old ones; layers of
youth blurs with each new face, but the same
songs play in the cell of my heart.
Summertime, the air is damp, the seats
sweaty. Driving unconsciously to your house
Aware only of comforting words yodeling
through a make shift CD player.
With each a cappella bump, I never lost a note.
The sun and air were more
alive, maybe
I was outside more to enjoy it.
(Pinker lungs and naiveté)
Instead, I simply smile from a window.
My body broken to the outside by little
black slats, that let smoke escape
to sounds of overhead airplanes
and cars with loud stereos.
A two flat, top floor
vacant except for
scratching of mice. I pretended to be
scared to stay fragile. I soon forgot about
bullet holes that blistered the ceiling when
your hand slowly slid up my skirt. Hands of
God pounded the sills, shaking
frames and chipping the paint.
Drafty and sparse, we planned my taking.
A mere sleeping bag lay upon creaking
dirty floorboards.
That night, my key wouldn't fit the door
as I entered home and tiptoed down
the longest hallway.
You were looking for a
job, then you found a job.
Heaven knows you're miserable now.
I was employed, starting out in my profession
(You always told me you were a "hair person")
The Eighties were coming to a close.
My hair still tickling the roof of your car.
You're drunk. I'm in a
coma; Our dysfunction's
held us together like a scab that never fell away.
"The woodpile,"
we sat, smoked occasionally and
picked splinters out from my spandex when
conversations died a horrible death. Your thin lips
around a fifth of jack. I preferred Vodka thrown
in a coke slushy.
Sometimes your friend would tag along.
He always sat too close; the heat
of an overworked car engine against
my thighs. You never seemed to mind.
Six years later and half a
person, It suddenly
struck me- I left you where I found you, No job
and seven guitars.
Oh, how it felt with Mozzy in the player
and the wind tugging my hair into tall
yellow flames. In the rearview your
confused face blending nicely into
the dull Gray pavement.