to see whether the man in black suit has passed by
He strides as though he knows she’s
eyeing him,
His eyebrows arched, his eyes
squinting, his lips, she imagined, moist.
He’s an over bearing squire with
not so much of a use,
I don’t know what word else is
there to use to describe what is obvious.
There is a volt of electric current
that swims through her veins whenever he comes around
The stolen stare, the last minute
glare
The almost but never quite near
encounter
The failed encounter—
Then, there was the sink incident
She was standing facing the
stainless steel sink,
singing old rock music, washing her
filthy coffee bin.
With her peripheral view, she knew,
someone was eyeing her,
Maybe a utility man or another crew
waiting in her que.
Or so she thought.
Standing with her back facing him,
she saw the black man in suit
tilting his head sideward looking
at her, intently as if he’s looking deep into her soul,
transmitting yet another volt that
in that second crawls through her nerves and eyelids.
The universe has little bits of
candy-sweet miracle it keeps in its side pockets.
And in that morning, it decided to
bring some of these miracle bits out and shower her.
She faced him. Her eyes met his,
she did not smile.
They were there in the middle of
the little room with an open door, as if the seconds stall.
He did not speak, she could not
not speak.
“Good morning,” she said,
in a very calm, somewhat commanding
voice even she was surprised she had.
He was stunned, she was not.
Right then, in the middle of the
room with an open door, where seconds refused to move
where water drip loudly from the
sink,
the girl knew there was something
she had won.
In that morning, in that room with
an open door, and a stainless steel sink,
while singing rock music .
**
Just
because.
4/1/2015
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