playing rough beneath your skirt. How
raw you must be. To sit before a camera,
legs uncrossed.
When I think of you
it is always of a small, locked room.
A principal's dark, full lips
pressed together in a smirk. A glare
from his fat, gold herringbone chain
burning tears in my eyes, my face
red as yours in direct sunlight. And
even as my voice shut down
that day, I knew ditching
to buy *NSYNC's CD
was worth more than
Prescriptive Speech class.
What I heard: four voices
harmonized in a plastic bottle.
Your falsetto, blowing the top off.
Michael Jackson
with no abusive boxer father
or snatched childhood.
Sam Cooke
sans German shepherds
stalking through his songs.
I've been watching James Brown
and Jackie Wilson make
pelvic fixation public domain
since I was old enough
to work a remote. And I have yet
to elude starched lines. How did you
learn to dance your way out of boxes?
Or did you
find it easy as breathing, like whistling
the national anthem?
Do you remember the Super Bowl?
How you tore Janet Jackson's breast
from her top?
I love you that way.
Her earth-brown bounty of fleshâ
large, black nipple
pierced, wind chapped, hardened.
And you saying, Go ahead. Look.
Dearest Pam,
I still dream of you.
College. Our second date.
How the ceiling fan would not cure
my fever that day, the white walls
beaded in sweat. I could have killed
my white friend for walking in on us.
Or kissed him right there in the dorms.
Damn the smoldering Newport cherry
that bathed my room in red. And you
cocking back that cold, hard Glock
against Samuel L. Jackson's dick.
My white friend and I, we could have
unzipped in front of the TV screen
and wrestled for the tube of Lubriderm.
I don't know what scared me more:
my roommate's wood or the camera,
out of breath, climbing mountainsâ
those muscled, brown thighs.
How were we supposed to compete
with Sam? Richard Pryor? Or Kareem?
With any man on your list of lays?
My mother's answer:
fuck foreplay
â
the other Pam's bed-tanned
Baywatch
castmates taped to her teen son's wall.
For my thirteenth birthday she framed you
garnishing a large bed in red lingerie.
I'm sorry. I never hung your poster.
Even now I don't know how
to love you right. But I suspect I was
onto something back in middle school,
unsticking the other Pam
to make room for my presentâ
four walls. So blank
and unassuming.
When it comes, I won't even notice it.
I'll be too busy looking good.
âJIM KELLY, FROM
ENTER THE DRAGON
See a clumped baby-fro budding below
Enter the Dragon
's hyperbolic grunts
and you, unsheathing that samurai sword
from bulging, white bell-bottomsâslaying eight
flower dresses in one scene. Or strangling,
with plucked chest hairs, wide-open women cops.
Imagine: a black silk pajama shirt
blown open. A boy leering on the couch.
Now picture my mom, Delilah, with shears.
Mother sees you and thinks,
lothario
.
Will not hear that besting another man
ten-gallon-fro intact
is Western as a Marlboro Man ad.
But you know your business, Jim. I see you.
We used to angle our asses off.
Like, say Cindy the flautist's
blouse was see-through. Say
she was sporting a tight
Les
Misérables
camisole underneath.
We might hit her off with an
unexpected mixtape, all show
tunes and power ballads. We might
compare the lead actors' recurring
sparks to an echo. Might use this
tidbit to tongue a girl down
in the instrument closet. After
school, fully dressed, bodies
enmeshed like two wild-eyed
ravenous stars, expressing
their natureâbarrel-roll style.
Saliva-heavy kisses, lips
smacking, rattling
snare bottoms. We jockstrap
gossip tweakers. I remember
asking Ashley to Spring Fling
because I'd heard
of her oral inclination.
We took notes, memorized
what worked on who. Rico
told me Ashley liked daisies.
I appealed to her inner kid
for weeks. Chased her
around the timpani, tickled
her midriff
with a feather marching plume.
Kept it on an innocent tip.
Until she got thirsty
at the dance.
We walked past punch bowls
to the main hall, held hands
as she drank from a fountain.
She made a left
at the make-out corridor
with droopy stems
stuck to walls.
I didn't even get to kiss her
face. I didn't know Rico
had followed us. Didn't know
he would jam Ashley's
hand down his pants. That
she'd slip her other palm
down mine. I didn't even
get to say Stop. Ashley,
I've spent 50 lines, 3,892
days flattering myself. Thinking
I'd used some next-level mind
game to get you
where, no, how, I wanted you.
But you sized me up
in under a minute. Examined
the stain just left of my fly.
& then you smirked,
I knew it
.
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
Obtuse red bolts cranked at each corner of the lot. Shirtless kids slapping hydrant-spray at largemouth-bass grins. Thin strands of water nearly blind Eastern Market cement. My wife, Jill, and I, we're in the thick of it, managing to overstep their runoff. Gum-popping teen lovers and elderly couples are weeds in aisles. Row after weedy-row they knock our hips together as we browse every pink beaded hollyhock, golden black-eyed Susan, and perky, white, perspiring snapdragon on display. We take an oblong tub of crimson clover and red poppy off a vendor's hands and I say the city is breathing. I prepare for a scene. Wait for her to miff our identical stride with a kiss and
Oh, baby! I always wanted to marry a walking poem!
Smiling, she reaches for my hand, locks her fingers for a moment, says
Yes. Yes, it sure is.
Mint, basil, thyme, and trout pot the breeze. Jill's pinched nose and lips twisted east and west say she's unsure of the aroma. She leads us to a corner bistro, plops her purse on a menu and I order Bloody Marys, no celery. A table between us, we smile awhile, talking about the garden we haven't sown. Beneath the table, we place our feet on one another's seats when hydrant-spray starts leaking against our tub. I look down to adjust her knotted gold anklet and sigh at a hummingbird, flapping near a cigar plant, in a banged-up plastic bed. She points just below the bird.
Well would you look at that butterfly go to town on those little pistils!
Jill. Oh, Jill. The things that woman sees.
The weight of last night's bloody rib eye, wine, and crème soufflé has guilted us into the gym. Jill's trying to take the StairMaster's title again, sweat spilling from her brow like rain beyond the entrance windowâa speed which rivals a woodpecker knocking at a telephone pole, after months spent idle in a sparse-stumped clearing. She looks left, laughs, and I can't really blame her. What she sees is me cruising a stationary bike. Moisture has found my face. It begins at a glistening thigh palmed by spandex shorts. It ends in spittle dribbled down the chin. My mind is wandering Jill's upstairs lair, tripping over bottled water lining her cupboard. I'm thinking about mud particles, decayed twigs, and demolished earthworms distilled. I'm wondering what it takes to kill a thing's root. Beyond the sidewalk, dwelling in a sea of lawn, two Pekin ducks should be charged with lewd conduct. The larger, presumably male, bounces on the skinny one's rump to the storm's steady pulse. I try to smile at Jill but she's headphones-deep in another world. The rain turns, beats harder on the gym roof. The drake's wide orange bill begins to nip at the woman's head. Lightning welts the sky and he's pecking. Jill's high-stepping something awful. Thunder shakes the window. Someone's knocking wildly at someone's skull. I stop.
Could I call this poem an aubade if I wrapped it
in fragrant tissue paper? If I locked this morning
in the mind's safe-deposit box and polished it
sixty-six times per day, until a sky's description noted
the number of feathers on a sparrow's left wing
and the crabgrass jutting from his uppity beak?
I once wrote a poem about a fruit fly orgy
in a grape's belly. Its crescendoed combustion
was supposed to represent the speaker's feelings
for a wife named Joy. That poem never really
worked out. This poem is aware of its mistakes
and doesn't care. This poem wants to be a poem
so bad, it'll show you a young, smitten pair
poised in an S on a downy bed. The man inhales
the woman's sweet hair and whole fields
of honeysuckle and jasmine bloom inside him.
He inhabits a breath like an anodyne and I think
I could call this poem an aubade if it detailed
new breath departing his mouth. I think I could
get away with that. Because who knows what
that even means? Maybe I mean
that's safer than saying it straight
like, This is about the woman I'll marry.
How one summer, she hit snooze four times
each sunrise. This is about her smiling
and nodding off, and smiling, and listening
to me mumble into the back of her perfect
freckled shoulder about anything but poetry.
And this morning at my desk, in the midst
of a breath, I remember not every moment
needs naming. I know precisely what to call this.
All right, so not really. But the morning my pops found Kenny G lying on my nightstand I did learn a black father can and will enter a bedroom, only to find Kenny's CD, bad perm and all, cuddled too close to his eighth-grader's head. He will tiptoe from the room, turn the knob, then kick down the door in slippers. He'll drag the boy out of bed down two flights of stairs and toss him in front of a turntable. Listen here, he says. When you finish a record put it back in the sleeve and you better not scratch my shit.
I curl into a ball on our shag brown carpet and stare at his wall of LPs. Breakfast folds into lunch before I move an inch. When supper rolls around I am shaking. (This is how jazz begins. Out of hunger.) Getting to my feet, I pull a record from the shelf, read:
Black Talk!
Charles Earland. A needle collides into an empty groove and out sweats a funky wash of organ. It feels like the afro's voice, grinning from the record sleeve, has picked itself out in my gut.