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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 50

From the manuscript Stranger on the Shore by Patricia Carragon

If I Could Write a Book

Sally lit another Marlboro

                stared at her Smith-Corona

                drank sweet Passover wine

                broke her writer’s fast on Kingsbridge Road

Her Elijah never came

                dumped her for a Scarsdale beauty

                with youth & class

Alone at the age of thirty-five

                her brain cells & sexuality craved attention

The RCA turntable in motion—

                fingers pounded to the beat & heat

                of Miles Davis & his quintet

Like the song

                if she could write a book    she would

Keys couldn’t keep up with Miles & his band—

                her past & present didn’t make sense

                nouns argued with pronouns

                verbs cried for help

                & adverbs were nowhere to be found

Ideas gone askew

                paperback nonsense

                scattered by her feet

She finished her wine

                put out her last cigarette

                said good night to Miles & his quintet

                ripped her unfinished page

                from the Smith-Corona

                before turning off the light

9-FantasyPondbyPatriciaCarragon
© Patricia Carragon Fantasy Pond

At Last

(sung by Etta James)

She moves through phases,

tags behind

his earthly shadow.

He leaves by daylight—

follows his orbit

outside her door.

Inside her head,

anticipation still spins.

She’s in love,

waited too long

for him to come.

The blues

bring on her winter’s night,

sways to the rhythm

of a hot summer’s eve.

In the shower,

his evidence

dances down the drain.

He’ll leave

by daybreak.

Should she ask him to stay?

Her crescent smile waxes.

(Published in Jerry Jazz Musician, July 3, 2021.)

Moonlight Serenade

Charlie was in bed,

tubes attached to his body,

listened to cartoons

on a nineteen-inch screen,

thought of Sophia,

his “Belle of Flatbush.”

When la luna was full,

Charlie used to sing

Moonlight Serenade

outside Sophia’s gate.

They’d slow-dance

to Glenn Miller’s rendition.

He’d relax his rhythm,

hold Sophia closer,

recall how safe she felt.

Her soft brown curls

would drape on his shoulder—

her smoky eyes—

stelle colorate, tinted stars

over a make-believe Brooklyn sky.

His protective hold couldn’t save her

from breast cancer twenty years ago,

their two sons from Viet Nam’s death call,

or their daughter from her husband’s fists.

A massive stroke took Sonny,

his last living friend.

His relatives were either dead

or couldn’t care less.

Charlie was in bed,

tubes attached to his body,

alone—except for routine visits from

the nursing home staff,

wondered if Sophia would be there for him

when he leaves for the morgue.

He hummed Moonlight Serenade,

but a dry cough cut his tune short.

Sadness, age, and high fever  

drained his cognition and will to live.

His memory was of the past,

not the present.

He prayed for Death’s visit—

Death would wear a white coat,

walk past the rooms,

make decisions on who’s to come

and who’s to stay.

But Death forgot about him—

perhaps Death’s eyesight was fading

when he came by last week,

took Hector instead.

Tina, his favorite nurse,

no longer visited him—

was in critical condition

due to a new virus going around.

He closed his eyes,

saw Glenn Miller and his band

perform Moonlight Serenade

at the Waldorf Astoria.

Everything was in Technicolor.

Sophia,

radiant and youthful,

rose from her table.

She came closer,

her smoky eyes—

stelle colorate, tinted stars

over a make-believe Brooklyn sky.

By the entrance,

a man in a white coat

checked his clipboard,

greeted Charlie with a smile

and opened the gate.

March 2020

(First published in Tribes Virtual Open Mic: A Gathering in the Time of Covid-19, Set two-week of April 16, 2020)

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