AFTER SUNDAY LUNCH.
Posted: June 8th, 2014, 1:54 am
I was laying
on my stomach
on the grass
reading a book
Netanya was laying
on her back
soaking up
the sun
as if owed her rent
her blouse open
at the neck
her arms bare
her grey skirt
drawn up
above the knees
to brown off
her legs
how can you read
on a day like this?
she said
I can read any time
I said
you should be soaking up
the sun
getting your lily white
body tanned
I like my body
as it is
she closed her eyes
face upwards
I remembered the time
my brother and I
went down to the beach
at Dubrovnik
in our suits
and conceding
to the sun
took off our jackets
and rolled up
our shirt sleeves
revealing our white arms
I smiled
and turned a page
I sensed the sun's heat
on the my head
I’d turned my collar up
to protect my neck
from the burning heat
nearby birds sang
unsure which
far off
the hum of traffic
I smelt the after smell
of Sunday roast
and mint sauce
and tasted
the white wine
on my tongue
even with sunglasses
the glare of the sun
made reading
a chore
so I closed the book
and lay on my back
and stared at the sky
birds flew overhead
here and there
I thought of the girl
who served in the café
in Dubrovnik
whom my brother and I
chatted up
with no results
she with her broken English
and we with no clue
when she spoke
her native tongue
we drank wine then
too much some days
then Netanya came along
and that night
we made love
half a dozen times
and the world seemed
a different place
as if someone
had turned a light on
in a dark house
and it was seen
for the first time
then the light
had become dim
and the house
like a prison
a child cried
in the background
another child laughed
the neighbour's kids
no doubt
a dog barked
a woman called out
a man snored
the sun shone bright
I closed my eyes
the book remained closed
I dozed.
on my stomach
on the grass
reading a book
Netanya was laying
on her back
soaking up
the sun
as if owed her rent
her blouse open
at the neck
her arms bare
her grey skirt
drawn up
above the knees
to brown off
her legs
how can you read
on a day like this?
she said
I can read any time
I said
you should be soaking up
the sun
getting your lily white
body tanned
I like my body
as it is
she closed her eyes
face upwards
I remembered the time
my brother and I
went down to the beach
at Dubrovnik
in our suits
and conceding
to the sun
took off our jackets
and rolled up
our shirt sleeves
revealing our white arms
I smiled
and turned a page
I sensed the sun's heat
on the my head
I’d turned my collar up
to protect my neck
from the burning heat
nearby birds sang
unsure which
far off
the hum of traffic
I smelt the after smell
of Sunday roast
and mint sauce
and tasted
the white wine
on my tongue
even with sunglasses
the glare of the sun
made reading
a chore
so I closed the book
and lay on my back
and stared at the sky
birds flew overhead
here and there
I thought of the girl
who served in the café
in Dubrovnik
whom my brother and I
chatted up
with no results
she with her broken English
and we with no clue
when she spoke
her native tongue
we drank wine then
too much some days
then Netanya came along
and that night
we made love
half a dozen times
and the world seemed
a different place
as if someone
had turned a light on
in a dark house
and it was seen
for the first time
then the light
had become dim
and the house
like a prison
a child cried
in the background
another child laughed
the neighbour's kids
no doubt
a dog barked
a woman called out
a man snored
the sun shone bright
I closed my eyes
the book remained closed
I dozed.