Five Love Potions – Five Tiny Poems to Mix and Match

**

Two blood oranges shared, a walk in light rain, enhanced by holding of hands, and a kiss or two, a bottle of pink champagne, and two teaspoons anise seeds.

A red velvet couch, or better yet, a loveseat, (it has the word love in it,) two vanilla ice cream and ginger ale ice cream sodas, a scary movie, (for obvious reasons,) maybe The Birds, a generous bowl of popcorn, shared.

A spring bouquet of blue hyacinths and pink tulips in a silver bowl, scent of gardenia, two perfect martinis, and Saint Saens’ The Bacchanale.

One carrot cake, a bottle of Malbec, two holiday sweaters, ugly or not, because they’re fun, Vivaldi’s Winter.

Two mugs of hot cocoa with tiny marshmallows, a batch of homemade mole sauce, (spicy and sweet at the same time,) a warm quilt shared, reading Keats to each other.

Golden plinth, roses sculpted, pink

      Honey and ancho

*

Cool water

Pitcher in copper

     With love, drunk

*

Snow silver, painted

And spring green, tendrils

   Arrive

*

Mother of pearl pages

     Story of a daffodil’s

     Whispers

*

Autumn leaves,

        Pup plays hectic

Sunset ribbons

*

Rebecca, Deciding

Rebecca cuts herself what she thinks is a reasonably sized slice of blueberry pie. You and I might think it too large; but for her, like Goldy Locks’ bowl of porridge, it’s just right. She leaves it unheated. One squirt of whipped cream.

It’s Thursday, and Rebecca’s day off from her job as a receptionist at Carlisle Auto Insurance. It’s a temp job she’s doing for six months. She’s saving money so she can continue her creative writing classes at PCC. This will be a low-key day. She said no to shopping with friend, Audrey, and no to a drive to the coast with her mother. Rebecca wants to read. She wants to read all afternoon. She’d love to read and write all day every day, but that’s not possible, yet.

She looks at the cushion in her couch’s center. It has a minor dent in the shape of her buttocks. They’re not big buttocks, and thank goodness for that. But they could be if she has too many “just right” sized slices of pie. She shakes out the feeling. Rebecca loathes fat shaming, and won’t do it to anyone, herself included. She takes a seat in her spot, and her tabby, Winslow jumps up on her left and makes himself comfy.

To Rebecca’s right sits a pile of four books she wants to choose from. Not one is a romantasy, though she’s tried to get into the newish genre, she thinks it’s silly. She made it fifteen pages into Fourth Wing and “had to” give up on it. She prefers classic mysteries and literary fiction.

She thinks. She says to Winslow, because, yes, sometimes Rebecca talks to her cat, which should I read Win?  Here we go.

I have here, Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler, Busman’s Honeymoon, by Dorothy L Sayers, Middlemarch, a super chunk classic, by George Eliot, and Cassandra At the Wedding, by Dorothy Baker. Rebecca eats two bites of pie; thinks while she chews. So, Winslow? 

Winslow merely purrs, closes his eyes. He clearly feels no need to have any input.

Rebecca says, well, Win. I pick Middlemarch. I think it’s a good choice. Winslow is now sound asleep.

Rebecca finishes her pie. Though she’s tempted to lick her plate, she doesn’t. Even though she’s in her own living room, and who would care?  She takes the plate to the kitchen, rinses it, and leaves it on the counter. She rinses off every speck of leftover crust and filling. Rebecca doesn’t want ants.

She settles back into her couch spot and proceeds to read. She loves the heft of the book and its cover.

Rebecca sighs happily, and thinks, if only.

She can sense that she’s drifting away. Not to sleep, but into daydreams. Winslow continues to sleep. Rebecca is on page twenty five. She should get up and move around. Maybe go for a walk. Maybe it’s the pie that made her sleepy. The book is good. She likes it. She’s read Eliot before, The Mill On the Floss. That was brilliant, she thinks. So far, though, Rebecca’s just not head over heels for Middlemarch. But, she tells herself, twenty five pages aren’t many.

Winslow stirs; stares at the front door. Does he hear something, or is he just staring? He stretches, then curls up and goes back to sleep. He’s making Rebecca feel sleepy. To read or to take a nap?

She gets up, stretches, picks up the book and reads three more pages while she paces her living room. Nope. Middlemarch isn’t for her.

She decides on a catnap, but not before a bathroom visit. She sits back in her spot. She leans back. Her couch is so dang comfortable. Rebecca sits back up, puts Middlemarch aside, picks up Farewell, My Lovely. She gets to page eleven. It’s good, but why can’t she focus?

Winslow has jumped up to the back on the couch by Rebecca’s head. She gives up, lies down for a nap, pulls her quilt over her. She notices it’s almost dark. How can it be almost dark? She hasn’t been sitting and reading for long. It’s April. The Equinox has passed. She looks at the clock on the wall opposite. It’s 4 pm. 4 pm!? She ate her pie at 12:30. After lunch. Three and a half hours could not have gone by. Now it’s pitch black out there.

As she drifts away, Rebecca thinks, just a short nap. Her doorbell rings. She will not get up to answer the door. It’s likely no one she knows anyway. Before she closes her eyes again, she catches Winslow’s heavy stare. His amber eyes are glowing. Glowing? 

****

Rebecca walks at Lovejoy Arboretum. It’s one of her favorite places. She knows the trees by heart. Today, a Sunday, it’s deserted but for her. Definitely odd. She walks her usual route, and comes upon a tree she’s never seen. It’s not a sequoia, but it is a giant. It’s an apple tree, but Rebecca can’t see its top. It rises up and into the cumulus. And from one particularly sturdy branch hangs a wide rope ladder, its rungs extra thick. She wants to climb, but where does it end up? When does it end?

A raven speaks to her from a nearby branch. He says,

Dear Rebecca. You want to climb, don’t you?  Alas, what is up there, and how great is the distance. That’s what you’re thinking.

Rebecca smiles, and says,

Yes, of course I want to climb. I should have brought a book so I could read up there.

Well, just so you know, Rebecca, my name is Yeats. William Butler, that is, but humans call me just plain Yeats.

Rebecca says,

There’s nothing plain about Yeats.

Yeats laughs his raucous raven laugh. He says,

I’ve brought a book for you. It’s here, beside me, in the crook of this branch. Here, take it. Take it, and climb to the top. Don’t come down until you finish it. But I should let you know before you start, that halfway up, there are two doors. If you’re tired, you can stop climbing there, and choose one. And behind each of those two doors, there are two more doors. You have choices, Rebecca. The first one, and once that one is made, another. And behind each of the two doors behind the one door you choose first, if you decide to stop climbing that is, there’s a shelf containing six books. More choices, Rebecca. Always more choices. And always with different outcomes. What do you want to learn? About what do you want to read? And that’s if you cease to climb halfway. You can keep going. But who knows when you’ll reach the top?

Have I gone on long enough yet? Asks Yeats in a friendly, helpful voice.

Rebecca looks at him and rolls her eyes. She says,

You’ve given me a lot to think about, Yeats. I merely wanted to walk among the trees for awhile. Can I choose not to climb at all?

Of course you can, dear Rebecca. If you don’t climb this tree, there are two more like it in the Arboretum. Different kinds of trees, different doors, different stacks of books. And please remember, Ms. Oakley, I’m a raven first, but many people call us ravens Trickster. I might be playing a trick, but I might not. Perhaps that’s a little on the nose, like the feathers on my beak. It’s a friendly warning.

Rebecca says, why did you call me Ms. I thought we spoke on an informal basis?

I like you, Ms. Oakley, but are you my friend? Humans can be Tricksters as well. From what I know of you, you’re a good person. You like animals, and that’s important to me. You also love to read and learn, and you’re generous. But I have to be careful, as you should be. We all want things. Sometimes we only think we know what we want. What’s the matter? Why are you rolling your eyes at me, Rebecca?

You’re starting to sound a little preachy there, Yeats.

Indeed. I’m sorry, Rebecca. No more discussion. I’ll leave you this book, and you can decide what you want to do. As I said, there are two more similar trees, not of the same kind but with similar kinds of choices. There’s no need to climb any of them. You can choose one or none, but if you choose a tree, then a door, and then another door, you must see your choice through to the end. Follow the instructions to the letter. Read your chosen book. No turning back. But also, like I said, you can choose this book, finish your walk and return home. Time for me to leave you! Good luck Rebecca Oakley!  Enjoy all the choices.

****

Rebecca finds her favorite bench, which happens to be the one closest to the giant apple tree. Now she can”t remember what, if any, tree or garden was there before. She thought she knew the Arboretum like the back of her hand. Now she’s not sure.

She opens the book that Yeats left for her. It’s Invisible Cities, by Italo Calvino. Rebecca read this, about ten years ago, she remembers. She was sixteen, should she reread it? Maybe she’ll see it differently as an adult? She flips through the pages. A lovely pink envelope drops to the ground from page 120. Maybe this is the trick? Does she just go home? Leave the envelope unopened? Climb this tree? Wait for one of the others?

Rebecca tears open the envelope. She pulls out a pamphlet. At first it looks thin. It came in a normal size business envelope, but then it expands in thickness. In fact, it’s about an inch and a quarter thick. Then she realizes it unfolds into an octagonal shape, twelve inches by twelve inches. She flips through the thick paper octagon. It has five hundred and fifty three pages. Rebecca catches her breath. She quickly folds it back up. It immediately shrinks. She places it back in the envelope and the envelope back in the book.

She realizes she has found the perfect book to read, and it will take much more than one afternoon to read it. She’s never seen anything like this before. She never knew anything like this existed. It’s a map; a map with illustrations and pages and pages of text. It’s a map of every arboretum on the west coast. But it’s not a map of trees and gardens. It’s a map of the villages and kingdoms that exist in the treetops. It tells where all the doors, windows, and entrances to these places are.

Is it real? Is it fiction? Is it a mystery map, or some kind of epic fantasy tale? Rebecca won’t be climbing any trees today.

She walks back to her car and drives back to her apartment. She misses Winslow, and it’s time for maybe a glass of wine and leftover homemade curried eggplant. And it’s time to read and study some before bed.

****

Rebecca awakens with a groggy start. How long did she sleep? And that sure was a wacky dream. Wait. Was it a dream?  Sure it was. A talking raven who recommends books. She only dreamed it because she couldn’t decide what to read. She asks herself again how long she slept. Winslow is in the same spot he was when she fell asleep. Has he been there the whole time, or did he move and come back? She left his food bowl full. And she filled his water dish before her nap.

She looks out, and sees it’s dark. She lets her eyes adjust to the darkness and looks at the wall clock. It reads 1:07. She assumes am. She hopes; because she still feels odd. What was in that pie? Audrey made it especially for her because blueberry is her favorite kind.

Rebecca throws off the quilt and gets up off the couch. She’s only a little dizzy, and she hears something drop to the floor. Winslow leaps into the warm spot she left.

She looks at the floor, and sees a book, and a torn open pink business envelope. The book is Invisible Cities, by Italo Calvino. That and the envelope are from her dream.

Winslow!  What do you think is happening? Sweet boy, what happened while I slept?

Rebecca picks up the envelope first, and her fingers tingle. She glances at Winslow, and his eyes are glowing again. Intense amber. She pulls a little pamphlet out of the envelope, and it expands in her right hand. The title says, Distant Lands In Deciduous Trees…

Suzie and Thomas

Suzie thinks designer bags are ludicrously spendy

It matters not to her that they are status symbols trendy

She’d rather spend her money on books and her cats

She likes novels to read and math texts to practice stats

*

Suzie has a new boyfriend – his name is Thomas Stone

Thomas’s favorite hobby is to fly his new drone

He doesn’t like designer things at all

Though he wears tailored suits – he’s six feet and eight inches tall

*

Thomas can’t drive Suzie’s little car

Well he can drive it some but not very far

Thomas has always been a big pickup man

Of Volkswagen Beetles he’s really not a fan

*

Suzie and Thomas are connoisseurs of wine

They love to sample many when out they dine

They drank Riesling on the night they first kissed

So that grape is always the first on their list

*

Next August 14th is their set wedding date

Thomas has a reputation for being kind of late

Suzie said he’d better be on time that day

If he’s not then in the garage he can stay

*

Suzie wants her party in pastel blue

The color of an iceberg- a pale winter hue

It’s an evening reception with a sit down dinner

The toast will be made by best man Byron Keatsner

*

Thomas is letting Suzie plan the whole thing

He just doesn’t want to misplace the ring(s)

He told his fiancee he’s no good at planning

And he told her best girlfriend – Mindy Manning

*

They have seven months until the big day’s arrival

The photographer Amy specializes in records archival

Their life is full of loving and fun

They fell in love quickly – their friends they did stun

*

Ghost Weekend

Edmund and Darlene spend three nights in Carl Ghost Town

Rumor says that on Main Street lives a scary ghoulish clown

Ed and Darl brought a very small tent

The rooms at the old saloon are too expensive to rent

*

Plenty visit but no one lives there

It’s for only the ghost clown who rules his lair

There’s also a tale of buried ghost treasure

To find silver and gold would give Ed and Darl real pleasure

*

It’s Saturday night and the Ghost doesn’t find them

So they get lots of sleep – some good REM.

Ed and Darl wish they had a giant RV

The walls would be solid – it would be so groovy

*

Their last night there they splurge on a room

They have no premonition of gloom and doom

At midnight they hear the rattling of chains

But it could their imaginations – their overactive brains

*

They stay up awhile and read poetry to each other

They hide under the covers but each the other doesn’t smother

The rattling of big chains soon does stop

But Ed and Darl hear moans – will the clown their heads lop?

*

But it seems Ghost Clown loves Baudelaire

So some poems with him Ed and Darl do share

Clown says his name is Charlie McShane

His time as a ghoul will soon be on the wane

*

He tells husband and wife they can’t see his face

He’s invisible and fast – away he can race

The old sheriff’s ghost is looking for Charlie

He listens for reggae – Charlie likes Bob Marley

*

But Charlie plays his favorite tunes low

And when he listens he drinks his bourbon real slow

Then Charlie tells them it’s time for him to go

He says have a safe trip home – I hope you liked my show

**

Autumn Mood

Sweet strawberry juice on my

Tongue

Perfect peach flesh fills my

Mouth

Nectar drips down my

Chin,

Sticky fruit scented

Cheeks –

Summer, savored, over.

*

Apples, pears, crisp.

Sliced with Mabon’s

Sword.

Bounty filled pies, tarts, cobbers.

Cider, hard with cinnamon.

Nutmeg spiced pleasures.

*

Stags, watchful in

Woods,

Light readies for its

Rest.

Autumn storm clouds plot their

Advance.

Brass bound trunks free their

Fall sweaters

*

I look to stories. Fairy tales, sprinkled with

Truth.

Real, but with magic,

Enhanced.

Brahms, Rachmaninoff, Bach, play just for

Me.

Berries like jewels, and sequined silks.

Tales illuminated, margins compete with

Texts.

Imagination,

Piqued.

*

My own tales, I’ll

Make.

Two Writers and a Kitty

Bianca’s sentences run on and on

Sometimes she sees them climb the maple on the back lawn

They try to escape her epic fantasy tale

Its tropes are formulaic – the words must bail

*

Bianca has taken a few writing classes

But her plotlines crack like cheap promotional glasses

She asks her kitty Lyle how to start

He wants to help and loves her with all his heart

*

Alas sweet Lyle cannot talk

He thinks she should seek advice from plumber – Jack Falk

In his spare time Jack’s a novel writer

He shouldn’t be fixing pipes – indeed he’s much brighter

*

Lyle can only communicate with his eyes meows and tail

Bianca’s frustrated and binges on wine and kale

She doesn’t want to go back to serving in a bar

She’s burned a few bridges and gone way too far

*

But everything she tries has been done before

Perhaps she should create her own legend and lore

She ends up asking plumber Jack

He fixes her kitchen sink and says – after dinner he’ll come back

*

Jack suggests the two of them work side by side

Bianca agrees – in him she’ll confide

She’s embarrassed to show him what she’s written so far

But he reads it and thinks it’s quite good – up to par

*

Jack asks her who told her that her writing is bad

Bianca says it was her friend – Enid McVlad

Jack told her he thinks Enid is jealous

She talks behind Bianca’s back in a way that is zealous

*

Bianca asks Jack if maybe they could co-write

He says sure – they’ll get along well and not fight

Lyle is pleased and observes from the couch

Bianca and Jack are a match – for that he can vouch

*

The two decide to write a mystery

It will include much Victorian history

The story will include one popular trope

A romance with fake dating – but enemies to lovers – nope

*

They’re writing Victorian so won’t listen to booktok

In what’s super popular they’ll take no stock

The pair just might end up a couple themselves

With many a wedding photo upon their shelves

*

Dessert

On a golden platter, dessert is served

Not a slice of cake, not a slice of pie, not

A delicious toffee pudding in a

Royal Stafford

Bowl.

But a book.

A beautiful book with a cobalt blue cloth

Cover, and shining silver

Lettering.

Inside, maybe a tale of mystery or

Adventure.

A saga, perhaps.

Or an historical tale.

To be devoured, savored.

No carbs to add to your belly, but words to

Enhance your

Mind.

Six hundred pages of chapters, paragraphs,

Sentences, in which to delve.

Maybe the word Mumbai, whose old letters

Spell Bombay.

The latter name rightfully evicted.

Maybe a story with brilliant red poppies,

Ships and sailors at war.

It could be a tale of a little

Bird.

The word, chickadee. Her nest in an oak.

Her story in chapter three or four.

How when she was young, she fledged.

A part fairytale, a part truth.

Battles?

Weapon pen, not sword.

*

A tale like a marble cake.

Flavors swirled, words combined.

Commas added for spice. Semicolons for

Sweetness.

Scarlet, lavender, periwinkle, celedon, and

Mint. Colors generously painted in words on

Paper.

The words, pearls, peridots, onyx, obsidian.

Conjured in conundrums, quandaries, and

Quenched. Questions, answered. Crises

Cliffhangered. (Some words invented.)

*

A duology, a trilogy? Or puzzle dessert in a Baker’s

Dozen?

*

This tale must end for now. I’ve gone on too

Long.

I’ve lingered lackadaisical. My sentences have

Jogged, perhaps run on, and sprinted.

Dessert eaten, done and dusted for now.

          At a later date, more words.

A Silly Sunday Rhyme

In the mornings – Kendra likes her coffee black

She lives in a lovely gambrel that she calls a shack

She has a sweet sheltie who’s called Gracie

And a cute little calico she named Lacie

*

Kendra keeps her garden well

She has exquisite roses her friends think she should sell

Gracie loves to bury some bones

When she isn’t doing that – she digs up small stones

*

Roses like to be fertilized with bone meal

Gracie thinks she does Kendra a favor – for real

Kendi likes her delicious moussaka with wine

But sometimes with ouzo – it makes her eyes shine

*

Her boyfriend Nick is originally from Billings

It rhymes with his name –  which is Nicholas Killings

He’s always wanted to change that name

But it really does have its own kind of fame

*

Kendi loves to call him Mr. Montana

It rhymes with her ex’s name – Maddox Fontana

She has had many significant others

To make up her mind – she has not the druthers

*

But Mr. Killings has proposed to Kendi

She’ll likely say yes – marriage is always trendy

When she marries Nick it will be forever

It will be solid – they’ll break up never

*

He’ll move into Kendi’s house – it’s not a shack

He’ll bring his kitty named Mervin Flack

Mervin’s named for Nick’s uncle – Duke Simon Flack of North Millack

They’ll all love each other to the full moon and back

*

End

Wait! Kendra married Nick, but did not change her name. She kept hers – it’s Kendra Shillaque.

Nature Is My Warmth

I think I dream.

Six sandhill cranes, over my bed,

Soar.

On my right, a wolf sleeps –

         On my left, a fox.

Before I drifted into sleep, I was alone

Though not

Lonely.

But I was cold, not warm.

Now I’m warm, and not

Alone.

The wolf and fox are not enemies to

Each other, as I always

Thought

Neither am I the enemy of either of them.

*

I must sleep in the woods. I can hear

Light rain, but I don’t feel it.

Though it’s cold, and I am

Warm,

I did not try to build a fire as London did

In his story.

Once, long ago, I learned how, but have never

Had to use that knowledge.

Would I have

Succeeded?

Maybe the wolf and fox

Know.

I’m sure they know plenty I do not

They have to.

*

I hear the cranes call.

To each other?

To me?

To the fox and wolf?

The Universe?

The stars appear; Moon rises.

*

The Sky is my ceiling. Nature is my warmth.

*

I think I dream.

*

Drinking, Eating, and Itching

When Elaine and Dan are together they love to cook and climb trees

To their backwoods love shack they both have the  keys

They cook in the kitchen and in other rooms

They’re creative with their inventive special va va vooms

*

But yesterday they both wound up with poison oak

Deep down inside Elaine and Dan are city folk

They go to the country only on weekends

It’s just the two of them – they have no woodland friends

*

But I guess I should take that statement back

There’s a still behind a neighboring shack

They’ve never met the old human who lives there

But he left them a note saying he has moonshine to spare

*

When they drink it they can’t feel the itch of their rashes

Also in their beef stew – they add some splashes

They must forgo the intimacy tonight

They won’t add more itches they’d have to fight

*

They’ll wine and dine the next time they come

And they’ll share with their fun neighbor some most excellent rum

It’ll be an uncomfy ride back to the city

Neither Dan nor Elaine are in the mood to be witty

*

They pack their leftover pastitsio in the cooler

They have plenty for next door neighbor Lady Hillary Hewler

And no stop this time for Italian sandwiches at Amato’s

Elaine likes hers best with no to-mah-toes

*

They pick up their lovely lab at her fabulous sitter’s

And they have three cats and a chameleon – they sure love critters

Also no market to pick up some cheese

They just want to get home – they’ve started to sneeze

*

Later Dan’s in the kitchen baking chocolate cake

Elaine’s in a cool bath for her rash’s sake

Dan brings her a gin and tonic

Her itch is making her feel demonic

*

When she gets out of the tub – Dan’s kind of in the mood

Elaine eats some cake and checks on her animal brood

She decides she’s good to go

So even though they scratch – they can’t say no

*