SOLO
Elevator. I am going down, checking my eyes in the mirrors,
checking my lipstick, giving myself a wink and a grin.
The bell. Full stop. Two men.
I find a thing to do, search the purse for mints.
Surely one is loose below the mace
where my trigger finger dawdles
until the men begin to talk: all satisfaction with their bottom line.
I would love to look, of course, as I know
they are, curling a glance around that cough,
scratching a cheek for cover, squinting at our descent,
the numbers running down
like the old calm gaze of eyes on calves.
My breath comes short: perfume for fear, perfume to cloud
the palpable air of blunted conversation,
a game of tennis where they have both rushed the net,
and I am the net.
The bell. Full stop. My floor.
The doors part in a sigh.
I snap my purse, and go: three strong, tight steps in heels,
and then one man howls,
a soft, melodic moan for me--
and then the other joins, and they are singing,
wolfmen enjoying their pain, my gift,
and I am free, more free than they can know.
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