Clausen House
By Adele Mendelson
(In a male voice)
It was a Saturday afternoon at Clausen house.
I was looking for strings for my guitar.
Over the years I had bought, an antique wrench,
a mahjongg set, and a signed photograph
of John Lennon just before he died.
I was considering a set of drill bits
when she walked in wearing bicycle shorts
and a red halter top. She walked up to me, stood close.
“Have you seen any sterling silver — forks or spoons,
a small kiddish cup? I know the prayers.”
She smelled of sex, if sex were the deep
dark light of a ruby. Her eyes changed from gold to green,
and I knew I could never trust her,
but trust, you know, is sometimes beside the point.
I was paying for my strings when I noticed
she had gone. I ran out to the street
and saw her a block away walking her bicycle.
I ran after her and asked,
“Would you like to get a latte?”
She said, “I know a bar.”
She ordered a Pisco sour,
explained it came from Peru.
While I made awkward small talk,
she sipped through her straw
and taunted me with her thighs.
I asked her name.
I was caught, drawn to the center of her web.
Why didn’t I walk away?
Because she knew the story I needed to hear.
She told it in a low voice, eyes closed.
“It is winter, she said. “We’re holding hands,
almost married. We are walking along a railing
above an ocean of ice. I take your hand,
pulling us towards the edge, but you hold back,
a fear of death.”
“I know about death,” she said.
Death happens when a tiny fissure in the sky,
and a person falls in.”
I could have chosen that dark-haired girl
who lives upstairs. She would have loved me.
Instead I became a beggar, living on crumbs.
I could kill her, but what good would that do?
I would be obsessed with a dead girl
instead of a living one.
And would it be my story or another one of hers?
So this is not about a woman in a casket
dressed in ash. It is about love and all the ways
it can hold you and hurt you.
It is about drowning in ice.
You can contact me at : adelemendelson.writer@gmail.com