Persephone
By markbrown
- 986 reads
I know I cannot escape how this evening will end; your favourite restaurant; your special table; the other diners like ghosts.
I will sit trapped by table edge, chair pushed in too far by a waiter you call by name. My tongue will be rough, acid in my throat, my stomach empty.
You will talk to me as if I am an innocent: ‘Take off your coat. Are you not staying?’ I will be evasive, inconclusive. You will hide your displeasure. I will see your hungry glance, itemising me, imagining how I will look naked. There will be no escape, home fading away.
‘A crying wife is a broken toy,’ you will tell me, ‘You are so refreshing.’ I will not correct you as I should. I will ignore the arrival of the glass of wine I declined. ‘A mistake,’ you will say.
The platter of food will obviously be for two. I will see the grease wet on your fingers and lips. ‘Come on,’ you will say; ‘eat.’
Eventually, I will place a morsel between my lips to be polite and you will have me.
‘Welcome to my world,’ you will say.
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Comments
Good title.The piece sort of
Good title.The piece sort of works by understatement(? or thereabouts). 'I will see the grease wet on your fingers and lips' is nice. Because when he has her for afters, poor dear... Elsie
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