Beneath falling oak leaves and behind
the Second Lutheran Church
beyond a fuchsia fused fall sunset
above Main Street’s hardware store
a second-hand ’74 Plymouth is parked and
bisected by the early moonlight shadow
of the Saturday evening steeple above
its interior illuminated by dashboard radio
Top 40 tunes softly sent from the transmission towers of
Charm City to the south
Before you find something
you have to look for it
and after I’d longingly looked for you
in all the wrong places
and in all of the wrong people
I rediscovered you
in an early eighties
church hall high school dance
just a stone’s throw from the
following morning’s body and blood
With an old Virgin hanging lonely above
and a new one swaying in front of me
singing sweet autumn syllables
as soft as early spring
twisted fingers and glancing lips
evening expanding and world closing in
you forgave my trespasses
with a soft swirling slow dance kiss
that either delivered me from
or aimed me directly at evil
The dance floor became
a mix of marginal swaying sin
and attempted long-term love
or one night wonder
Friday night corduroy friction
attempting to ignite a fire or something else
the din turned the sanctuary into
a two-story babbling tower
we exited in a professional DJ recessional
of Simon and Garfunkel and moon and stars
ending silently at my back of the lot car
where you shoved your hands deep
in my Levi’s pocket as if digging
for a bottom of the box Cracker Jack prize
while I paused for a stained glass second
inhaling oak, Anaïs, and October
with arms around your sweater
and chin atop your head
I had one eye closed to the future and
the other looking towards a
street corner phone booth confessional
while trying desperately
to force myself to forget that
eventually I will miss you forever
Steven Harz
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