A poetic re-telling of a memorable night . . . |
With the keys to my father’s car I exit my familial kingdom through bedroom window My cold bare feet tickled by the grass Who’s long damp blades rise like the swords of a domestic militia As if to dissaude me from treading forth into the darkness But they like the apprehension manifest In the slow-then-rapid bubbling pulsations of my youthful heart Do little to break my steely resolve “I’m going to see her tonight,” I metronomically whisper under my breath While struggling to pacificy the electric adrenal sensation That shakes my skinny legs and quickens my breaths In the chilly aromatic winds of August’s early morn. “I’m going to see her tonight,” These six simple words slip my tongue unconsciously Yet prompt the tide of a newly genesis’d courage While I tread the length of the yard To enter my mechanical chariot Of tragically transient teenaged affection. With an expedite twist of the ignition The engine undesirably roars to life Threatening to wake my biologically elect From their restorative slumber And knocking my heart from its temporal refuge At the precipice above the harrowing depths of my stomach. A second explodes through millennia And I wait and wait Anticipating the martyrdom of love At the hands of those whose love made me. But the universe that shines fortune on such puristic agenda Grants me an amnesty of passion So I pilot my vehicle North Guided by the magnetic pull of her strange and beautiful soul. “I’m going to see her tonight,” Such repetition draws the life from words But not these They feed on their succinct resonance Growing rotund and full and hearty Threatening to burst and wash the world around me In the colorful life-blood of first-love As I park at the end of her street in the dim camoflague of the sunless hour Then silently enter her home Through the side-door she left unlocked in expectation of my arrival “I’m going to see her tonight,” I whisper as verbal ellipsis While I pause to survery the house absent of its waking patriarch Before my final and most crucial task. “I’m going to see her tonight,” Though this time I speak nothing aloud As I slowly breach the threshold of her bedroom And am welcomed by a smile that paints My words into the space enclosing our bodies’ Palace of retreat. |