The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Roger Pfingston
After Breakfast
Walking the woods across from our house of forty years,
I’m telling you about reading the paper before breakfast,
how I stopped and looked away, thinking rain, the cat
sniffing, knowing the difference between bacon
and rain, how it brought me back to your sweet doing,
even now, your hand taking mine among the leaves,
their gentle touch and glide over our bodies, a few
clinging to my sweater as if to slow the fall.
Lines of Oil
He actually fell asleep under her practiced hands, the oil like another skin
sliding between her palms and his hairy back for which he half apologized, telling,
because she asked, of the one massage he’d had years ago, how that woman teased him
for his hairiness, used the word hirsute and then asked if he knew what it meant.
This woman laughed it off as she dribbled lines of oil, said she’d seen hairier.
Unused to a stranger’s hands, he tensed, holding his breath. Don’t do that, she said, just
breathe normally, and he did until he woke face down, blinking his slow return.
When she asked how he felt, he said, Pleasantly reduced, which made her pause.
That’s a new one, she said, leaving the room, looking for pen and paper.
That Morning
he was coming up out of the woods, half expecting to see her waiting at the back door, shaking her head
at his coatless indifference to the cold when he stopped for no good reason other than the weight of another year
newly hung on the kitchen wall above the coffee pot, its red light still burning, a cup or more.
When he opened the door the radio told him what time it was, expected highs and lows,
then some liner notes about the next composer whose name seemed vaguely familiar.
He poured the remaining coffee into his cup and joined the cat at the window. He stood there
thinking it was longer than he should; he stood there thinking it didn’t matter.
And then he stood there until it did, his turning away scattering birds from the feeder.
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