deepundergroundpoetry.com
Slits
Her legs are like silk,
encased in nylons with seams running
to the Holy Land.
They cross and uncross,
they twitch and they rock.
"I need a cigarette."
Please do.
Well manicured,
subtle and lovely.
She takes out her lighter
and (snick)lights. A drag, eyes closed,
she melts a bit and evaporates,
stress steaming off like the smoke she exhales.
"My mother says I'm wasting my life."
Well, what mother doesn't?
Her golden brown eyes glow at me in the sunlight.
A twitch of the lips,
chuckle.
"She says I should just settle down, instead of
running around with all these men. Something about
a cow, and free milk. I don't know. I think
she wants grandchildren."
Ah.
"Yeah, I've got my boyfriends, or
lovers, or whatever makes you giggle.
I like them, I enjoy them, and
I don't want to get married.
You know why?"
Good Lord, no. Do tell.
Rolls the sleeve of her cashmere sweater
up past the wrist.
Pale, raised little slips, like
tiny blades of white grass, and they
cover her forearm, they decorate her skin.
Two large ones,
more like worms, crawl along the main vein.
"See these scars? I've had them
since I was 16. A bad year, oh well,
who cares? But the point is,
I've got three slits.
These two, and the one between my legs.
And every lover I've ever had
has been more interested in the latter
than the former.
It's something to be ignored, circled around.
Even if they ask, it's for courtesy's sake,
or to make sure I'm not some kinda
psych case.
I won't spend my life with someone
who is afraid of the ugly,
the dirty,
the sad,
or the painful.
And so I'm single."
The coffee comes,
the lattes are particularly good today.
I want to touch her legs.
I want to kiss her scars.
We talk about Richard Brautigan instead.
encased in nylons with seams running
to the Holy Land.
They cross and uncross,
they twitch and they rock.
"I need a cigarette."
Please do.
Well manicured,
subtle and lovely.
She takes out her lighter
and (snick)lights. A drag, eyes closed,
she melts a bit and evaporates,
stress steaming off like the smoke she exhales.
"My mother says I'm wasting my life."
Well, what mother doesn't?
Her golden brown eyes glow at me in the sunlight.
A twitch of the lips,
chuckle.
"She says I should just settle down, instead of
running around with all these men. Something about
a cow, and free milk. I don't know. I think
she wants grandchildren."
Ah.
"Yeah, I've got my boyfriends, or
lovers, or whatever makes you giggle.
I like them, I enjoy them, and
I don't want to get married.
You know why?"
Good Lord, no. Do tell.
Rolls the sleeve of her cashmere sweater
up past the wrist.
Pale, raised little slips, like
tiny blades of white grass, and they
cover her forearm, they decorate her skin.
Two large ones,
more like worms, crawl along the main vein.
"See these scars? I've had them
since I was 16. A bad year, oh well,
who cares? But the point is,
I've got three slits.
These two, and the one between my legs.
And every lover I've ever had
has been more interested in the latter
than the former.
It's something to be ignored, circled around.
Even if they ask, it's for courtesy's sake,
or to make sure I'm not some kinda
psych case.
I won't spend my life with someone
who is afraid of the ugly,
the dirty,
the sad,
or the painful.
And so I'm single."
The coffee comes,
the lattes are particularly good today.
I want to touch her legs.
I want to kiss her scars.
We talk about Richard Brautigan instead.
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