Solera
After the
film at the Cinema, he
asks Do you want to go home,
or…? She smiles, Or, what?—
thinking how it is, eight years
into our marriage, it’s still so
much
like dating, on the weekend—
deciding
to go one more place—
then
one more, before going home.
They
grab the last table at Solera,
He
orders a Kava and a Cab;
the
bartender nods, brings the
bubbly white
to her, the red to him.
They
smile and nod to the other
customers,
happy the place is full
but not
crowded. They take in the
chill
music, talk about the film, their
cat,
plans for Sunday, mindlessly reading
the
signs across the street: Kitchen Bathroom
Additions, S&A Food Mart – Beer. Pop.
Snacks.
Cigarettes. Jackson Hewett
Tax Preparers.
Personal FX Hair Salon, Thread. Nothing fancy.
Down
the street is Sax Avenue, Mise En Place,
The
herb place that’s always closed, Head’s
Up
Hat
Store, Open Face, Godiva’s vintage shop,
Hedonist Chocolate. Now that is fancy. It
does
not matter. They are not in Cornhill,
not on
Park Avenue, nor even Monroe.
They are
in their own neighborhood—the
South
Wedge. It’s Saturday night and their
next
stop is home: only a few blocks away.
2 comments:
I feel like I was there!
Great imagery!
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