Chapter in suddy waters
Soapy, suddy waters.
Eric and I’s hands
were buried underneath.
Let me tell you where all the
shenanigans and hanky-panky
officially started.
Right here, when I was cleaning
the big dutch pot that Mama
did bake the pudding in.
I wondered why they’d call it
Dutch pot. Was it made by people
who spoke Dutch?
And speaking about languages,
Mamaw said Eric could speak
two languages:
English and Spanish.
I’d have loved to hear him speak
a sentence longer than ‘como estas?’
And ‘muy bien.’
And ‘gracias.’
The girls at the high school I go to
think it’s hot when boys can speak
different languages.
I think it’s hot when ‘men’ can speak
different languages.
There’s a Big and Long difference
between the two.
You’d have to have a painfully
mature brain
to get the pun.
And when it came to Eric,
I needed not look to know.
That there is a BIG
and LONG difference.
Then our hands brushed
underneath the cold waters.
We both were reaching for
the bent fork with aging flower
patterns on the handle.
Eric chuckled, and I smiled shyly.
“Almost mistook your fingers
for the sponge,” he said.
And when my mouth gaped
with no words coming out,
he added:
“Your hands are soft.”
And I felt like...the compliment,
like the smile,
was a secret.
So I glanced back
at my parents.
Still watching “The Sound of Music”
on our old box Tv.
Eric followed my eyes.
Then he laughed again.
“Those old movies
are for old folks, yeah?”
That was what
he asked.
And I answered:
“Yeah. A bit lame.”
He grinned. Then all of a sudden
he was leaning over.
Into my ear.
“Meet me in the hallway
later tonight. I’ll let you see
a real movie.”