The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Karren Alenier
RACONTEURS IN TANGIER
″What can go wrong is always more interesting than what goes right.″ Paul Bowles
Tell me those stories about you as shadow of Jane Bowles, breathing on her neck, shining light into her mouth, the pain she suffered, waves of pain from a bad tooth--too much sugar in her mint tea. Ha! Like me, you suspected the majoun sticky with raisins, dates, honey, ground ginger, walnuts, nutmeg, anise, globs of goat butter and of course cannabis, cleaned of stems and seeds. You profited as her dentist in Tangier. No! You played would-be biographer trying to extract details about her wedding, her marriage to me, Paul Bowles. Persistent, you declared yourself devotée, lived with her, wore her clothes but never noticed she called her husband Bupple or Fluffy--look at me, that man answering his door in necktie and jacket, that man who named her his muse. But she limped, didn′t she? She lived on a floor below me. You probably wonder if I chose a Jew to embarrass my father. You ate with us the night I ranted about my family. Do you think Jane served as my cover, that my mother expected grandchildren? The simple truth is I loved her as I loved no other. Tell me, was it true her female lovers like you poisoned her?
INCISOR
I smoke with my dead lover′s husband because his kif tastes good--aromatic, strong. Paul talks about a snake and the body of a boy who lost his mind to this slithering creature. He forgets even women like me can hear this story in the souk. Behind that screen of smoke, his eyes burn like coals. He blames me, Cherifa, descendent of the Patron Saint of Tangier, for the death of his wife Jane. What kind of marriage between these two? I knew her better, inside and out, than this hungry-looking liar who says he grieves. When he journeyed to Ceylon, I took Jane to my dentist. She bought me this gold tooth. ″A voluptuous woman should care for her teeth,″ Jane said to me. That torturer, he yanked out my incisor--a rotten tooth I howled over like a moon struck dog. Jane swore I could be her dentist before she let that butcher touch her. She hated doctors. They crippled her knee. Sometimes she screamed she wanted to be a python to crush those who stood in her way. When did Mr. Bowles hold Jane in his spidery arms? She gave me his den in the casbah. The two of us could crawl in there and drink until my name was hers and hers mine. She feared majoun, said it would seal her mouth like cement. Has the master forgotten how greedy Jane became the first time she tasted that dark candy? Probably not, storytellers invent their own truths, storytellers traffic in gossip that twists people′s heads. Last night as I entered a dark alley, I heard him say, ″Cherifa laughs like a savage.″ No, I laugh like the wild canine I am. I spit on Paul′s shoes. What does he know? An American, he thinks that spit is for shine.
AN ONLOOKER GOSSIPS
Stooge, the philodendron, served as the Moroccan maid′s stand-in channeling intimate orders that cut through reason. Magic in a dirty
cloth containing fingernails, pubic hairs, sticky phlegm, dried blood buried in the potted plant′s loam. At 52, the mistress still slept
with a stuffed koala bear dreading night shadows, dosing and dozing fitfully. If the hired woman poisoned the husband′s parrot, flashed
the quick blade of her mechanical knife in his direction, what injury did she coax her green spy to do to his little girl muse?
THE PARROT THAT SPOKE TO JANE BOWLES
Budupple, budupple-mah, rop the parrot said to Jane. Not, Hi, where is your money? Not, Hello, take me home! After the sunrise horse- back ride--clip clop--with fifteen cowboys through the Costa Rican jungle, trees laden with howler monkeys, the big black male roaring, swinging from his tail, tiny babies clinging to their mother′s teats, Jane and Paul were offered one of seven young parrots. ″Nonsense,″ Jane squawked, ″I don′t break up families.″ But Budupple perched alone on a man′s fingers, so they bagged him in a burlap sugar sack, along with their 27 trunks and Paul′s typewriter. Jane heard him say, Don′t pinch me but Paul retorted, He′ll never learn English. The parrot ate their peppermint toothpaste, one Russian novel, and Jane′s tortoise-shell lorgnette much to her delight-- that gift from her mother, she never liked it anyhow.
FLOWER
Because the hotel manager floated scores of our favorite flower on the surface of the swimming pool, Jane and I decided to visit the Taxco market and buy enough gardenias to cover our bed. At siesta careful not to arouse staff sleepyheads, we carried two baskets of blossoms in several trips into the hotel and up the stairs. When the bed became a sea of creamy white, we undressed, lay down and drowned our senses.
How much is too much?
In the blue fluid of the pool Jane Bowles poked her head, short curly hair winking red, through the fragrant corollas--a swoon of flower boats. Could a husband and wife, sheath and knife, be joined in everlasting memory on a perfumed spread of gardenias? She with her women; me, Paul Bowles, with my men.
Could I recreate those hours we lay together?
In New York I furnished everything in white: sofa, chaise longue, Ottoman, coffee table, lamps, a polar bear rug. Then I sprayed the drapes, and every pillow, every throw with ambergris mixed with crushed petals of gardenia. Come back from Taxco, I wrote to her.
What price paradise?
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