For two months
I’d waited for you-
Adrift for a time from
The mere sensation of even
A stranger’s touch-
Not knowing it was you,
Of course,
But for that longed for warmth
To envelope me.
How funny
And how easy
You became my Christmas present-
Mon cadeau.
My only gift had been a self-bought
Over-sized,
Under-priced
Tatty jumper
And then you arrived-
Dropped yourself at my table
In your yellow rain-coat
With slightly drunk,
Tear-filled eyes-
Lonely for your lover
Who’d flown home to family.
You’d been abandoned
For three days,
Or so you thought-
Till you were in my arms
Amid a darkening street
In The Marais
And each kiss goodbye,
That started as a cordial bisou,
Seemed never quite enough
And your hands-
Finding their way easily inside my clothing-
Felt only teased
By what they had not yet
Touched.
I wanted to take you home-
My hotel-called-home,
With it’s corner balcony that hid
All but the tip of Notre Dame
And my pillows-
Like feather-filled lozenges
That enticed no sleep,
But my concierge had other ideas-
Even on Christmas night
No guests meant no guests,
However cold it was outside
And however innocent
We attempted to look
While the imprint of your lips
Burnt away on my neck.
And so I found myself
On the red sofa
Of your Les Halles living room
Amid your cat and dog,
With His scent everywhere-
Upon the delightfully pillow-like pillows I slept on
And in the painters nightshirt
You dressed me in,
Later on,
When the kisses stopped
And the dawn’s cold air
Dropped by.
We had nothing in common-
Not even a language-
But we were both alone
Amid a city of fairy lights
And family affairs
And what else mattered.
I awoke each night
As you stroked the hair from my face
With your architectural hands-
Your eyes pouring into me-
Looking, perhaps,
For a deeper meaning
Or some forgivable
Justification
But there was nothing
But our basic needs.
Even as you suggested to stay
In contact-
You knew my eyes
Saw your sophomoric lies
And twisted attempts
At half-truths-
Trying to clutch onto something
New and different
In the midst of the complacency
You’d created around you.
There was nothing more
Than two boys
And three nights,
So much shared in silence-
The inevitable not needing a voice.
I waved you goodbye
That last morning
Inside your age-old building,
On your spiraled staircase,
Half a floor below you
With your scent covering me-
Like a blanket
That’s never quite big enough
To stay wrapped in
Forever,
And your cat stated back at me-
Questioning me through half-closed,
Sleep-filled,
Feline eyes,
Sensing the betrayal of the situation
Which she had slept through most of
And I was walking away from.
Behind your green eyes and blond hair
You wondered
How I could mean
So much
In so short a time.
Was it minutes later until his return-
Did you wash the sheets?
Did you hold him
As if he were me
In that bed,
Beneath the darkness
Where we once found each other
And took pleasure in the taste?
Did the cat snarl out the affair
Before you
Or did I dream it all-
The three nights,
The two boys
One brown,
The other blond
And the swift sweet unwrapping
Of mon Cadeau?