Girls’ Night Out
by
Antonia Alexandra Klimenko
I tried to
avoid the draft
instead I stayed to serve
breakfast
lunch
radio dinners in their aluminum coffins
(all short orders)
sex--the main
love--the side
blues on tap
“And how would you like
your brown-eyed baby girl?” I dished,
wiping the spit-shine from my tits
“Sunny-side up
or
over easy?”
“Easy,” you groaned--
consciousness
slipping from its zip-lock bag--
Nirvana, now only
the name of a rock
band
“Easy, huh”
me, brushing flies from your lip--
the stench of the heart like rare steak gone bad--
your boyhood buddy cooling in the freezer
I tried to avoid leaving
but you left me left and right
left right left
Your teeth and their chattering infantry are still
marching
When you make it as far as the living room
send me a telegram, won’t you?
Till then,
please consult your manual for further instructions
The baby’s in the oven
the napalm’s in the fridge
* * * * *
"Girls' Night Out" was first published in Big Bridge.
Widely published, Antonia Alexandra Klimenko's work has appeared in XXI
Century World Literature (in which she represents France) CounterPunch,
The Original Van Gogh’s Ear Anthology, The Rumpus, Levure
Litteraire, Big Bridge, The Opiate, Strangers in Paris, Occupy Poets’
Anthology (in which she is distinguished as an American Poet),
and Maintenant : Journal of Contemporary Dada Writing and
Art archived at the Smithsonian Institution in Washinton, D.C. and New
York’s Museum of Modern Art. She is the Writer/Poet in Residence for SpokenWord
Paris.
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