Wednesday, January 27, 2010
"Sounds Good To Me" (Champagne by Shoestring Dialogue)
Stuck At The Top (Whiskey by Orlo Newbould)
“Sorry I’m so dry. I’m on the pill.”
She was dry. I had been closing my eyes to shut out a headache and sustain a hard-on. The sex wasn’t going well, but I looked up at her and as she bit her lip in concentration my fervor was renewed. A little spit, a little tuck and we shared blinks and smiles until I was ready.
“It’s ok. I’m on the pill.”
It was ok. My seed fell on rocky ground and that was that. Another lay. There was no seduction, the whole thing felt like an arrangement, like every time before, only this time the clean-up onus was hers.
I had always associated sex with love, but the echo of those disenchanting words “I’m on the pill” rattled in my naïve head. She didn’t want all of me, nobody did anymore, what with my family tree now blooming and blocking out the sun. I had become a product of the whiskey night, of desire and rubbers and pills. I would have to learn the art of disassociation and just try to have fun. And not love.
Now I sweat more after sex than before and during. Was it what I wanted? Was it what she wanted? Was it what we wanted? Is there a we? Sex used to be a beginning of adventure and love but sex had become compulsory, an end of booze, hormones and shared sleeping quarters.
“It’s Friday. I’m on the pill.”
Work-week almost done and I’m looking at wines but everything worth drinking comes in a glass bottle with a real cork and is too expensive. Unsustainable. What if I should fall in love and want a second bottle? I remember the Scotch in the cabinet with the waffle iron and leave the wine shop with empty hands. I walk back home. Pour two-fingers and pinch a cigarette. I refuse to brush my teeth. I belch. I fart. I curse. I pick my nose. Just trying to avoid pussy on a Friday night. But she keeps coming after me and whispers in my waxen ear…
“Lay with me. I’m on the pill.”
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Tipsy Ambition (Champagne By Orlo Newbould)
Everything was in order, on my birthday, the blades of grass soared into the sky above me just as they should, and nobody noticed me on my birthday because I was a commodity.
I was too small to march to a picnic blanket and carry off crumbs. I was too weak to shovel grains of sand. I was too young and too curious to sleep though my mother insisted. I should stay put and grow.
It was summer, and the mothers were all having children then stomping off to work the watermelon picnics of the giants. We were all, my brothers, sisters, birth-mates and I, expected to slumber until the nectar of juice boxes and chunks of bread crust were delivered to us for breakfast.
Mother had to work. She could not supervise. She was supervised. I noticed the sun ducking behind clouds in alternating warmth like a seductress. The sun trumped my mother¹s milky mandate to wait. I swung my feet out of bed and did deep knee bends in multiples of six.
I was fresh, new, limber, and not one of the joints in my segmented anatomy crackled. I could scurry to the sun.
I scurried to the sun.
Under the sun everything was enormous, but I understood where I was. My perspective was changed, but the scenery was familiar.
I saw with wet eyes the concrete steps and scaled the porch with sticky feet.
Slipped through the threshold under the door.
Slipped through the threshold under another door.
Up more stairs to a bookcase.
One human gulp of flat champagne slept in the bottom of a black coffee mug atop the bookcase.
I shimmied into the mug and sipped all I could, and feeling confidently tipsy, fell out of the mug and down the glass panes of the bookcase to the keyhole.
Slipped in without a key and with the ambition of one who is confidently tipsy, reasoned:
"I should read all these books."
