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Heather Butler Jun 2010
in the twilight of dawn
I can already hear the shower.
quietly I wonder where the
time went.
I turn over and face the
peeling paint on the wall,
trying to grasp those
vestiges of a dream which
faded to air motes and half-light.

okay, I'll make breakfast today,
and I hope you like oranges.
no, I never bothered to memorize
which fruits you like
in the morning. I know
it's been years, but
I'm not superman and
you knew that when you said
I do.

don't tell me not to
grumble quietly to myself;
I need this bubble of
relative sanity
if I am to survive
5 am showers for
nobody.
you are fresh and clean,
an angel,
and your blowdried hair
frizzes out like a halo.
not a hint of gray.
must be a new color
you're using.

all right, fine,
I won't light a cigarette,
but I also won't
change my shirt.
I like the sweat stains.
they make my profession seem
like work and not
like poetry.

I retreat to
the backroom
where my typewriter sits
upon its unholy altar.
the radio beside it
stands presently silent
amidst the ashes
and crumpled pages.
I would sigh as
I sat down on my sagging chair,
but I am not
a sighing man.

instead, I groan slightly
as my joints protest
in their groggy morning voices
and rest my ***
upon the threadbare cusion
of my favorite
wooden chair.
I find a station on the radio;
something Haydn composed is
floating through,
and I talk to
my secretary.

her voice clicks and clacks
and rings when she breathes.
she's speaking in stanzas
and only I
can silence her.

but this ***** ain't done
confessing just yet.
Heather Butler; 2010
Frank Cavalo May 27
Slick-back
Knuckles bare and callous
Fingertips equally tough
From plucking
Gut-spun thread
Lips chapped
Blowdried by merit
Of ***** habit
Whose stench clings
At the pit of my stomach
And pulls me to his
An intimate tango tinged
With notes of oud tucked betwixt
A soft bed of sweat and boot-cleaner
Smiles stolen from Molly
Scattered upon plastic sheets
Egyptian cotton, soiled
Polyester tees
Denim cut offs
On loan from Daisy
Your bolo tie hanging
Tapping at my chin—
Eros sting—
With each incoming swing:
Lute-stringed; hair-pricked,
Greased-up pig,
Play a tune with my skin
And a lethal codetta
For you—
I’ll sing!

— The End —