Boy living away from home discovers his "Mom" in his kitchen. |
RETURNING TO MY FORMER HAUNTS Nursing a cup of morning coffee Laced with Black Sambucca It rests on my eagle-foot bathtub Beside my shaving cup and brush I got Cagney staring back at me From my cracked bathroom mirror A cigarette burning brown On the porcelain corner I’ve got a mouthful of stale old secrets And rooms to rent down the hall The shades are drawn and the TV’s on Broken promises pace in the dark I’m keeping warm with A bottle of Revolution and resistance… Women are the snipers of the heart Time alone here is a bitter pill The lesbian schoolteacher served mutton stew She left a copy of the New Testament On my toilet seat a while ago Said she had some Ash Wednesday wine and ladyfingers Dipped in Spanish espresso I cut open a dozen cold tablets Separated the red from the white And went to bed with Bella Donna As Hoagy Carmichael spilled from the radio Television shadows Flickered against the stained drawn blinds I was sleeping in my gypsy boots Wearing tequila like perfume I crawl between the shards of broken bottles I could’ve made a nickel but I like the sound of breaking glass So I bought a round of drinks for the ghost of Bukowski While two ballsy chicks licked their swizzle sticks I slipped out to grab a bite They wore a cracked old leather look Like a World War bomber jacket Abrasions adorned their faded faces With crass cruelty Now there’s a ghostly shadow by my stove and There's a lasagna in the oven I heard the seductive pour of wine and wondered Who’s in the kitchen beside The mice and roaches? There’s a buttery taste of oil That rolled across my lips like a kiss I let the red onion’s footsteps Walk around my lonely tongue The taste roamed the darkness of my throat and Put a noose around my appetite I saw her black lace stockings Hung like a weeping willow over the chair Her singing in the kitchen Drove the vermin from the walls Her wooden spoon was dancing with The spaghetti and the steam The table was set for two this time And I welcomed this favorite dream A single rose in a mason jar Blessed the dinner plates It may have been the cheese or It may have been the fruits The sliced pies and pastries - or bread crumbs on the seats But I put on a clean T-shirt Cause my mother was in the house And the cigarettes and beer cans Were kicked under the couch And the linoleum looked much brighter The sink sparkled with its white hard gleam There were breadsticks and butter olives on the side... A crucifix above the stove And rosary beads by the knives She looked at me like she was never gone And I knew it was all a dream But I decided I could have dinner now I didn’t care what it would really mean For the currency of her affection Filled the room with her recipes Her fist measured out the flour Her fingers took a pinch of salt Her eyes still saw me Like no one else saw me And her beauty never betrayed her smile As the lights in the kitchen dimmed and faded I thought I caught a whiff of her oregano On my hands and in my hair Words by John Apice C-Copyright-Registered House of Apice Poetry February 15th 2002/ May 30th 2002 For Mom |