Great
Expectations
He was sitting to himself, reading, in the public
library when a young woman came next to him wearing tight, winter-weight black
leggings and a down jacket. She hovered at his right side, pulling a book from
a shelf and then casually returning it. She bent down to pull a title from a
lower shelf, then scratched her knee with vigor at some length and the
outrageous question is Should he have scratched her knee for her since it was
just inches away from his face and hand? As he thought this through she stood
straight and moved a few feet away, undoing her coat with a loud zip but the
moment had passed. He sat there, still, for another ten minutes but she left.
*
He was mistaken. She returned, her back to him,
perusing a different shelving of books and he looked at her a bit more closely.
She wore her hair pulled back and knotted, plain silver earrings and stood with
her legs slightly apart in a challenging warrior stance. Her sneakers had a
pink rim around the top, much like those of a young, young girl, but she was at
most thirty. After a minute or so she pointed a toe in first one direction and
then another. Had he made her impatient? He now thinks that he should have
scratched her knee, scratched it hard until the legging material frayed and her
skin showed through.
*
The next day he returned to the library at the same
time and of course sat in the same chair. To no avail. No fairy tale: no
leggings, no down jacket, no itchy knee.
*
On Thursday he tried once again, choosing a current
magazine to read. Nothing. Now he finds himself going to a library of hundreds
of thousands of unread books yet with no expectations.
*
-
- - - - - - - - -
*
Fifteen months, almost to the day, he was standing at
the library’s elevator when his elbow was inadvertently jostled. Excuse me, she
said and he immediately looked at her knees. She was not wearing leggings, but
it was her. I haven’t seen you in a while he said and she said No, I have not
been here but am back to do some work in the research department. The elevator
doors opened and closed and he joined her on the second floor. He sat next to
her at a study table and put his hand on her knee. Her skin was softer than the
black winter legging material would have been. She said she remembered the last
time, she said You wanted to scratch my knee, didn’t you? And he admitted as
much. Go ahead, she said, go ahead. He said he wanted to scratch her knee until
it reddened and nearly bled.
Black Velvet
It
is a room of solitude, empty of all
except
a few furnishings and shadows cast.
A
length of heavy black velvet material
going
grey with dust of the ages, at one time
a
drape or curtain evident by sun damage
on
the back and by the frayed bottom edge,
casually
drapes across a sofa though it
was
never meant as a coverlet.
The
sun had to have been persistently bright,
the
window or covered area
—French
doors, perhaps—
quite
large and the material cut too long.
The
bare hardwood floor would only require
vacuuming
and a decent size oriental rug
to
make a presentable appearance though the
black
velvet is beyond its serviceable time,
past
a higher calling.
A
woman stranger to the surroundings
enters
the room mid-evening
feeling
along the wall to the light switch,
pushing
it with a mature forefinger
ornamented
with a bright red nail.
Flipping
the light switch changes everything.
Chrome Hood Ornament On A Red car
One
supposes they don’t make
chrome
hood ornaments like they used to
back
in the thirties, forties and fifties,
nor
as many, nor as often.
The
shiny decoration (a sleek animal or
nude
female muse, as a rule) is an
after-market
add-on; nowadays
no
car manufacturer would append
such
a garish-yet-glamorous fixture
to
a production model but they are
in
their own way compelling.
Looking
at the chrome, a rational image
morphs
into a barely recognizable face
distorted
like a funhouse hall of mirrors
and
better yet if you want to ride flat across
the
car’s hood after a bit of partying
while
Larry the driver tries to spin you off
doing
figure eights, you can get a firm grip
on
the chrome and hang on at least as long
as
a rodeo bull rider.
Gene's work just gets better and better--so evocative, the reader feels as if she is there in the story.
ReplyDeleteA.
Thanks, A. A most discerning reader...
ReplyDelete