5/31/2011

Fickle



I never planned to talk about fruit.  

I was going to speak of romance, feats of derring-do, 
having discovered a very cool guy with a story 
to tell.  But try as I might, he just stood there, 
never swashing his buckle, just mute and smirking, 
thumbs hooked in his belt.  OK, so screw ‘im. 
I’ll tell you instead about fruit. OK, not all fruit, 
just peaches and pears. Peaches are lovely, yes,
but they’re so obvious, you know?  Now, pears?  
Pears are mysterious.  I’m intrigued by pears.  
I really want to like pears, but they’re always so 
stand-offish, unknowable, teasing with hidden potential 
that they never deliver.

I guess I must be a glutton for punishment, silly me,
because I keep giving pears another chance.
One day, as I searched yet again for the perfect one,
I found this lone peach hanging out with the pears. 
The peach sat there shyly, listing slightly to the left,
a little off-kilter, fuzzy cheeks blushing beneath my gaze.
The eager peach looked completely out of place
among the arrogant indifferent pears.  Choose me,
it seemed to whisper, sweetness riding on its breath.

I’ve always been a sucker for strays, so it should be
no surprise that it was the peach I took home.   
I might speak here of its warmth and the softness 
of its skin, the slight give of the flesh under my touch, 
the lushness beneath the blush, and the incredibly sweet 
juice that...  sigh.   But I won't.  That would be unseemly.
  
Ssshhh...

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This was written for One Shot Wednesday.

5/27/2011

Just Desserts?


As Marsha answered the doorbell, that song from West Side Story ran through her mind, “Something's coming, come on in…

Life with John had been horrible, but she was finally rid of him. Now, Marsha had the feeling that something really exciting was coming. 

The cop at the door said, “Marsha Smith?  You’re under arrest.”
 
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This was written for Mr. Knowitall's Friday Flash 55.  It's a continuation of a story posted last week, Rump Roast, Well Done.

5/21/2011

Liar Liar


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This was created for the Tenth Daughter Of Memory.

5/19/2011

1912 - Anthem of the Promised Land




“Only in America
Dreaming in red, white and blue
Only in America
Where we dream as big as we want to
We all get a chance
Everybody gets to dance
Only in America”

Except maybe…
The un-"equal," the unemployed,
The homeless, the under-fed,
And anyone whose face is
Black, brown, yellow or red.

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This is my entry for Friday Flash 55, hosted by the inimitable Mr. Knowitall,


5/18/2011

The Honest-to-God Truth


I’m going to be late, I think, as I stand in the hotel bathroom dabbing cover-up onto my face.  I don’t like what I see in the mirror.  Another sleepless night has added its footprints to the tracks of exhaustion and tears that already etch my face. I’ve got to put aside the guilt and go on, I know, but it’s not easy.  I am, as they say, wracked with it.  I should have said something. 

Do advance warnings actually serve any purpose other than to raise one’s anxiety to a fever pitch?  Does knowing that the storm is brewing help you stay dry?  If you had known where the tornado would hit, could you have jumped aside?  Probably not.  

Still…

***

Back in college, Linda was always gullible.  Every Tom, Dick and Isn’t-He-Gorgeous-Harry who came along and showered her with compliments was The One.  When they all proved to be nothing more than yet another horny frat boy looking to score with the prettiest girl on campus, she was devastated.  I’d tried to warn her, but such a warning coming from the plain Jane sharing her dorm room was suspect, even in my eyes.  And were I honest, I’d have to admit that I was jealous of the way she drew the best from Alpha to Omega like flies to honey.  But watching her self-esteem being chipped away by every guy who took advantage of her was hard.

When she met Matt senior year, Linda just knew.  He was The One.  I was pretty sure he was just another one, but right after graduation, they married.  

You like him, don’t you?” Linda had asked when she told me she wanted me to be her Maid of Honor.  "Tell me the honest-to-God truth."

“Of course I do,” I lied.  "Matt’s a great guy.”

So I stood at her side holding her bouquet, looking on as Linda said “I do” and smiling through the requisite wedding tears.  They both looked so happy.  I couldn’t help but wonder if my misgivings had been just another manifestation of my jealousy.

And then life went on.  I went to New York, and Linda and Matt stayed in Miami where he had joined a law firm.  I was eager to start my career in publishing, and Linda was eager to start a family.  I did very well, while Linda was not as successful.  Her relationship with Matt seemed fine, but after several years of marriage, all attempts to have children had failed.

Seven years ago, I flew down to Miami one Friday morning to visit Linda for a long weekend.  Matt was away at a convention and she seemed really depressed.  I hoped I could cheer her up a bit, and maybe encourage her to consider adoption.  Most of the people I knew who decided to adopt had no sooner signed the papers than they were pregnant.  We talked, cried, drank about a case of pinot, and talked some more.  But at the end of the long weekend, I’d not been able to advance the idea of adoption.  Matt, it seemed, wanted only a child of his own making.

Matt got home Sunday afternoon.  He dropped his bags and came out to the lanai where Linda and I were lounging by the pool in swimsuits.  He took one look at me and gave a long whistle of approval. 

“Wow, the big city certainly agrees with you.”  

I guess I should have been flattered, but in truth, I was a bit insulted.  I knew I looked more polished than I’d ever been able to pull off in college, but I also knew that was just a by-product of the confidence I’d gained while climbing the corporate ladder in one of the most cut-throat industries in New York.  I was still me.

We had dinner at a popular local restaurant, where Matt was apparently a regular, judging by the number of drinks sent over by his fans.  Once back at the house, I said goodnight, pleading an early flight.  It was a beautiful tropical night, so I opened the sliding door to the lanai and climbed into bed.  The several drinks I’d had at dinner worked their magic and I was soon fast asleep.

Sometime in the night, I was jolted awake when the sheet over me was suddenly yanked back, and I looked up to see a dark shape standing over me, silhouetted against the moonlit sky beyond the open door.  I opened my mouth to scream, but didn’t get a sound out before a hand clamped over my mouth.  I quickly realized that the man I’d first taken to be an intruder was Matt, reeking of alcohol.  I struggled, but he was just too strong; I was no match for him as he raped me.  Every woman thinks about rape, wondering how she would get through it were it to happen to her.  What I never realized was how little time it would take to be so totally violated.  It seemed to me that no sooner had the sheet been pulled back and his hand clamped over my mouth than he was climbing off me and heading for the door.  As he left, he hissed, “Don’t you say a word.”

No, I never said a word.  Not that night, and not in the years since.  I never said a word, even when Linda told me Matt had taken off for San Francisco with his secretary to “open a bread store in the Haight.”  And I never said a word when he came back six months later, begging her to take him back.  Worst of all, I never said a word when she agreed to give him another chance, telling me, “But if he ever does something like this again, I’ll kill him.”

***

Oh, yes, I am consumed with guilt, not about Matt’s death, but because Linda took her own life after she killed him.

In the mirror, I see my six-year-old daughter standing in the bathroom doorway behind me.

“The babysitter’s here, Mommy.”

“Thanks, honey.  I won’t be too long.  I promise to come back to the hotel right after the funeral.”

I wipe my face, kiss my daughter, and leave to say goodbye to my best friend.  And to tell her the truth, at last.

“I’m so sorry, Linda.  And that’s the honest-to-God truth.”

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Written for the Tenth Daughter of Memory 
.

5/17/2011

Gone Fishin' at Ebbets Field


A couple of friends’ recent musings (you know who you are)
Reminded me of  the happiest day I ever spent with you.
“Come on, kid. Let’s go fishin’.  It’s the opening game.”
That’s what you said when you picked me up
At school just after noon on that nice October day.

We drove to the coast, and went out on the pier, and
With a twist of the radio dial, we were at Ebbets Field.
Dropping hooks in the water, we lined up at the rail:
A bunch of old men, Vin Scully, you and me,
A tom-boyish girl in dirty Keds and torn dungarees.

“Play ball!”  And they did, your Trolley Dodgers
And the Bombers; you know who I mean.
We didn’t know it then, but it was close to the end.
We won that day, but lost 4-3 with the last.  Maybe
That’s why they turned tail and headed for LA land.

We listened to the play-by-play that day, with names
That would one day be legend:  Mantle and Ford,
Robinson, Hodges and Berra.  And I caught a big fish,
With the old men all cheering and you smiling proudly.
“That’s my girl,” you said.  “A chip off the old block.”.

I wish I had known it would be the last time.  There were
No more World Series for the Bombers and your boys.
They betrayed you and you never forgave them.
And there were no more fishing trips for you and your girl.
Your new girl hated fishing; this girl found boys of her own.

But today I remembered, as I do every year when
The new boys of summer take up bats and fans cheer.
That was the best day I ever had with my dad,
And looking back, I'm really glad that you wanted to share
Your boys, the Bombers and fishing on that wooden pier.

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This is my entry at One Shot Wednesday.


5/16/2011

Rump Roast, Well-Done

 
John and Marsha sit side-by-side on one side of the booth in the dark, paneled dining room of the new steak house, studying the menu.  When John scootches closer to her, Marsha is charmed.  Maybe the candlelight is working its magic.

It’s their anniversary.  Things have been a bit rocky in the marriage lately, at least for Marsha.  She suspects John hasn’t noticed any difference.  And that’s been the problem.  Not only is he not as romantic with her as he was in the beginning, it seems like the only time he actually sees her is when she’s the butt of one of his practical jokes.  She’s about reached the end of her patience, and has decided it’s time to take action.  This anniversary dinner is step one in her campaign to bring back the passion.  She’d really wanted to go to the romantic little bistro downtown, but, hey, marriage is a compromise, right?  She’s willing to give a little.

“20-ounce porterhouse, baked potato with the works, creamed spinach and the wedge salad with blue cheese dressing and bacon for me.  What’re you having?” John asks as he closes the menu.

Easy for him to say, Marsha thinks.  He hasn’t gained an ounce since our wedding ten years ago

“I can’t decide,” she replies.  “Everything is so fattening.  Did you see that baked potato the waiter just delivered to the next table?  It looks like a football.”

John pauses the process of slathering butter on the dinner roll he’d holding and looks at her, eyebrows raised.  “So? You’ve got a good appetite.” 

“But the calories…  You know everything goes right to my hips.”

“”Ohn nee ilyu okgrt,” he mumbles around the mass of roll he’s just stuffed into his mouth.

What?  Did you just say I really need to lose weight?  What’re you telling me? That I’m fat?” Marsha demands.  So much for the romance.

John laughs.  “No, of course not. What I said was, ‘Don’t be silly. I think you look great’.”

At that moment, John dramatically slides off the edge of the booth and lands on the floor with a thump.

That’s it.  Marsha leans over to help him up and back into the booth, where he slides onto her steak knife up to its hilt.

“Yeah, that’s what I thought you said.”

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This was written for the Tenth Daughter of Memory.