Random Acts of Poetry
Waiting Room
We sat in fixed positions,
he and I
so that we wouldn't disappear.
Our day had fled through the window.
This waiting had the quality of enamel,
like a souvenir plate spinning in place.
Most of the furniture was vacant
and the radiator spat in the corner.
The chair had a frayed edge,
and the receptionist used bad grammar;
she had a problem with her larynx.
I felt a sensitivity
to her wrenched voice,
as she gargled into the phone.
Then my leg fell asleep.
So I made ambitious circles
with my feet
like a nervous orangutan
while the man across from me
pretended to be blind.
I was inclined to disturb him,
ask what was so fascinating
about his year-old Newsweek.
It might have inspired
a ping-ponging argument
to smash the tedium
of that afternoon room.
But the dull lines of his face
revealed no devilry,
not a single urge
to step forward
though the door of living
until his name was called.
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