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Little Brown Girl

After Christa Wolf's "Dvided Heaven"

 

In the beginning,

he stalked her,

tendering out of the brush,

closer and closer each day

'til that stick in his fist

could have caught her.

 

And for this,

she thought him chimerical.

 

Then came the dance—

she was just her puberty,

punch bubbles self,

'til he tweaked her arm

and dervished her out.

 

Snagged easy as doughnuts,

she nearly floated

away from the floor.

 

But he stiffened, sullening up.

He stared through her,

estranged by his lust.

"I don't do this,"

he thought.

 

"Pretty hard, it must be,

acting like that,"

she said, thinking she'd sew him

right up.

 

But he stopped.

His cragginess dropped.

Those old pitty eyes melted

down to this malminess,

and he stroked her out

with his twittering hand

into that pastoral street.

 

He strollered her home, quiet,

like her arm in his was some tap.

 

Her breasts, Beefsteak tomatoes,

ready to drop. Her chest,

warm as some crotch.

 

And still he said nothing.

Still he quartered her in

through her gate.

 

Her mother, inside, peeked out

through the shutters.

"Sorry girl,"

she said, shaking her head.

 

On the stoop, dour orphan—

that doorknob bit into her hand

and she thought it was over...

 

"Do you think you could love me?"

he said.

 

And he left.

And she smiled like Eve

'til his shadow jigged slenderly off

to the corn.

 

She was sold.

So she invited him over for spatzle.

She let him touch her and kiss her;

she moved into his attic apartment;

she let him sleep

with her head

on his shoulder.

 

"My Little Brown Girl,"

he'd say,

"my savior, my rabbit,

you will be my wife

one day.

Little Brown Girl,

I'm young again.

You will be mine forever

one day."

 

And she'd answer,

"Yes, Doctor Manfred,

Herr Father, Messiah—

my adam, my ticket,

my fate."

 

He gave her a tortoise

instead of a ring.

 

And her mother, back home,

shook the pudding up

like her head—she said,

"Sorry girl,

a wife you'll never be.

Not to him."

 

Brown Girl went to work.

And at night while she was dormant,

Manfred awoke.

"Silly girl,"

he nibbled,

"a teacher you'll never be.

You'll never make it

out of the Works."

 

But in April she grew an inch.

She went out,

tasted truffles

and Schnapps.

 

Next thing she's bought her books.

Next thing and she's clocked out of the foundry

for good.

 

Next thing, her messiah went West.

 

Then he wrote:

"It is heaven

here," "I want

you," and "Besides, the freedom and smokes

are cheap."

 

She left after school dismissed.

In her nervous train,

she thought those eastern cows

crooned out to her, flying by

fast as lakes.

 

She thought sunflowers turned

their cheeks,

and heard swallows

whining her name

every crossing.

 

"My girl,"

he whispered, knock-kneed that she'd come.

And she felt that brown

grope her right up

to her scalp.

 

"Amazing," she thought,

walking beside him again.

"My hand's as proud

as a bachelor's."

 

They went out for coffee—

"To you," he said,

his black cup up,

"and your silly mistakes

of the past."

 

And she drank up the cream then

like luck.

 

He reached out

as she swung

through the door—but his thin hand missed,

or else she clippered off

from the wind of it.

 

Stepping out,

she turned East.

And it was understood.

 

"How is the tortoise?"

he asked.

 

"Amazingly well."

 

"Feed her tomatoes,"

he said.

 

"I'll try that."

 

"Go," he said.

 

And he crept back, slow,

to his desk and his books

in his dusky new house.

Dizzied, he scribbled,

"Sorry girl,"

like a sum or a reason.

 

But she was no sorrier

than a Hairstreak or Monarch

clubbing away

from her sac.