Nobody
Bonds with the Hostess
by
Roberta Brown
My
dinner party days are over.
They
were not all good, I promise,
but
some were downright magical.
Most
lay somewhere in the middle: good meals,
convivial
atmosphere, appropriate music.
The
cocktails and wine did their work--relaxing
expressions,
raising voices, sharpening appetites.
But
I was outside all of that, open concept aside.
I
was making sure something did not overcook
in
the oven or scorch on the stove.
I
was mixing drinks, uncorking bottles, brewing coffee,
making
room in the fridge.
I
was recounting place settings, serving, clearing,
loading
the dishwasher.
I
was in the thick of it, of course.
One
might say even the center,
and
yet outside too, until one night,
it
all came clear.
Two
friends who knew each other
casually
but had never connected,
both
married to other people,
also
present of course,
hit
it off, talking all night,
moving
outside, then in, then back out again.
At
dessert, their shoulders touched,
and
John said, “Carol and I are bonding!”
should
have happened years ago.
It
occurred to me then that nobody bonds with the hostess.
*
* * * *
Roberta
Brown ã2017. All rights reserved. No use without written
permission of the author.
Roberta Brown is an Assistant Professor of English
Composition at Western New Mexico University in Silver City, New Mexico.
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