About Ten Minutes

There was gold in the morning;
It reflected off the dew damp oak leaves
Outside the tiny bedroom window,
Colored the walls and the ceiling
Like an infant savant with finger paints;
Made everything glow
For ten minutes and 24 seconds.

He would hold her then,
Beneath the daisy print sheets,
While the Apollonian halo held them both,
And whisper in her ear
As his arms and hands,
His legs and hips,
While his body and being wrapped about her,
Found all the ways she fit to him;
As he would melt into her
Like warm gold
For ten minutes and 24 seconds.

Puzzled

She found him in a thousand pieces
Beneath the dim marquee:
It was a William Powell retrospective,
But she had come to see Myrna Loy.
It was his eyes which caught her:
Opalescent beneath the neon and moonlight.
It wasn't her intent to piece him back together,
Not from a thousand weary bits
On a dirty sidewalk
At one-thirty in the morning.
Still, she couldn't leave his eyes like that,
Glistening with grief
Next to a Skittles wrapper
And an oil stained popcorn box.
"I'll just dry them a bit,"
She assured herself,
"That's all."
She pieced together just a bit more:
The slope of his nose, a jaw line;
It was intermission,
She had time.
She got to his lips,
Full with passion unspent,
Shifting at her touch
Ever so slightly upwards.
She felt compelled then
To finish the rest.

Headstones

They kept the company of spirits
For a quiet afternoon,
Wide oaken arms shielding them
From the prying sun
As they unwound the past
From perception;
Piecing together a new story
From the secret,
And the misremembered.
There were things inside them,
Things meant only for the other:
Things misplaced,
Lost,
Abandoned.
Excavating with trusting words
And gentle eyes,
They turned the aching earth
Disinterring a wonder and a life
From the company of spirits.

Story

He told her a story when she wasn't looking.
She was watching contrails in the sky,
Criss crossing the pale blue,
Merging with clouds
And each other
To form foamy, cumulous words.
She would never remember what the story was about:
There was a girl,
And a moon,
And something about tides,
But it came from no where,
Caught her off guard,
And was over
Before she realized the sky was all in Mandarin.

She turned to look at him,
Saw how the vaulted reflection
Turned his grey eyes periwinkle.
"What?" she asked.
"Hmmm?" he responded looking up
(He could read Mandarin)
"It was nothing.
Just the way the sunlight was dancing in your hair."