11 East St
- by trnsprntmntn
Back there where the bay window was, behind the washing machine and next to the screened porch. Back there where the records were. Back there I go in my mind and three songs jump out. Who you been loving since I been gone? A long tall man with a red coat on. Good for nothing baby, you’ve been doing me wrong. Who you been loving since I been gone? Who you been loving since I been gone? Sometimes you hear sounds you never could hear before, and that’s how it was at Tim’s house, in the back room, the bay window prisming the scoop of green lawn, your eye lost in the distant horse fields as the snare, it snared you. Well, someone told me yesterday: That when you throw your love away, you act as if you just don’t care. You look as if you’re going somewhere. But I just can’t convince myself. I couldn’t live with no one else. And I can only play that part, and sit and nurse my broken heart. It’s just how some songs break the air and make your guts or your ribs, maybe your nuts, go, ha! Go, oh! Maybe it was just the room, the window, Tim on the stereo, pushing the music around. Anthony works in a grocery store, saving his pennies for someday. Mama Leone left a note on the door. She said, “Sonny move out to the country.” Ah, but working too hard can give you a heart attack. You oughta know by now. Who needs a house out in Hackensack? Is that all you get for your money? I’ll bet we all found a song there in that mythical room of sound, noise, and friendship, in that wing of the labyrinth, there on Eleven East Street, playing those records. MB 12/2/2021
Back there where
the bay
window was,
behind
the washing
machine
and next to
the screened
porch. Back there
where the
records were.
Back there
I go in
my mind
and three songs
jump out.