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      In Ordinary Time 
                                           by  
      B.J. Wilkinson  
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
  
      
                                           
                                           In the bar 
                                          of the hotel 
                                        across the street 
                                     from the train station 
                                     where he and Sgt. Frank 
                                        had come to wait 
                                     that hour for their bus 
                                  he finally asked the barmaid 
                               with the auburn, close-cropped hair 
                                in his pained and brutish French 
                                      the name of the music 
                                              "This?," 
                              she returned in crisp Anglo syllables 
                                         "or the previous?" 
                                      "The...uh...previous...," 
                                           he replied, 
                              tentative, halting, schoolboy words, 
                        and she placed upon the thickly varnished bar top 
                                 the bright orange compact disc: 
                                              Corsican Polyphonies 
                                             "At first," 
                                 she continued, rinsing glasses, 
                                 "I could not listen without crying, 
                                        They were so...," 
                                     "Bittersweet," he offered, 
                                  riding the lift of the wine, 
                                           "...like life." 
                                   her eyes looked up to his, 
                                        smiled into them 
                                            a moment 
                                        "Yes. Yes,...as life" 
                                 in that moment so achingly one 
                                   with the close cropped one 
                                           in the bar 
                                    of the great tall windows 
                                  through which he had watched 
                                    the snow fill the streets 
                                           of Chamonix 
                                     that holy afternoon... 
                                                                  he curled his arm 
                                                                 beneath, across her 
                                              belly 
                                                                cupped softly in his 
                                              palm 
                                                               the sweet weight of her 
                                             breast 
                                                                peeling his damp and 
                                          cooling groin 
                                                               from her pinkened rump 
                                                                 then slid his mouth 
                                                               over the damp, auburn, 
                                          close-cropped 
                                                                        hair 
                                                               unable to retrieve the 
                                          fallen sheet 
                                                               that gathered at their 
                                              knees 
                                                              unable to hold the dying 
                                              light 
                                                              the fading, winter light 
                                                                     about them 
                                                                        until 
                                        Sgt Frank coughed 
                                            and said 
                                       "It's about that time, 
                                             Billy Boy." 
                                 swallowing the rest of his wine 
                                      in an audible gulp... 
                                    our Billy Boy set his own 
                                        unfinished glass 
                              softly beside the last of his coins, 
                                       spun off the stool 
                                                              there will be a time for 
                                         the Gredos..... 
                               and followed in the pale blue wake 
                                    of Sgt Frank's cigarette 
                             into the bittersweet, silver afternoon 
                                          of Chamonix, 
                                    and the rest of his days.
       
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
  
      
      
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