FLOWERS WITH A LADY
It is 1954
and The Big Apple welcomes her with parades, radio interviews, and television
appearances. Three out of four
Americans, already addicted to frozen foods, watch her on black and white 12
inch sets. In a short time t.v. dinners
will replace conversation at the family dinner table. The thirty prosperous people who have
purchased colored sets see her slender fingers move across piano keys like
white sea anemones sliding over the bleached bones of a dead blowfish. Floating in mid-air as if by magic, a dozen
yellow roses, her trademark calling card to immortality, sit inside a glass
vase on the grand piano. She turns her
head to look at the audience and plays so enchantingly that they believe, for
the first time in their cultured lives, they are hearing the music of the
spheres, measured movements of celestial bodies.
THE RED DOOR
Two women
stand at the entrance of a red door, quibble about the price of lust and love,
like affected women in a comedy of manners restoration play. The older, intense and distressed, points toward
her boudoir with a bony forefinger. The
younger woman, possibly her daughter, looks the other way, uninterested in the
older woman's sexual secrets. Dark
memories circle the old one's head while bubbles, like light champagne rising
to the top of a glass, stream continuously from the younger woman's skull. A red earring in the shape of a tulip dangles
freely from the younger one's left ear, the fruit of her youth. The older woman's lips, top row of teeth
barely showing, form a feeble snarl. She
doesn't notice that her left breast has slipped and fallen from her gown. In the early morning she wears no jewelry,
her drooping purple sleeves heavy with the weight of time. In contrast, the younger woman's white and
lavender strapless gown of brightly flowered brocade, enticing on her slender
body, clings to her taut torso. The
three strands of pearls around her neck accentuate her breasts, which are
lovely and plump. With just a generation
and a half separating each other from the declining years, the trophy wife
wantonly enters on cue as her elder clone exits.
WE
DON'T LAUGH ANYMORE
Day by day
the chasm grows wider and wider between them.
They wear false masks in mixed company, their version of public
life. Occasionally, they no longer
camouflage their displeasure and lash out at one another like the tormenting
claws of a wild cat teasing its prey.
Close friends still view them as a model couple. Nevertheless, their life at home has become
inconsolably private. Each finds solace
in an empty room. Underneath, they are
unraveling. Behind the pleasantries
their eyes scan every opportunity for opposite exits. With his spear, he pricks her female essence
a jab at a time within their cave of discontent. He has grown tired of
her. She stale of him. On the surface
they project puppet shells to perform love's choreography while the real people
are packing bags and writing their goodbyes from places of wordless
despair.
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