![]() BUTTERFLY LANDING KISS.A Poem by Terry Collett![]() A BOY AND A KISS AND A GIRL IN 1962![]() ![]() All through the woodwork lesson and through a double dose of maths, he thinks of her, the kiss on the sports field, the brushing of his lips on hers. He'd almost cut his finger on a saw, being preoccupied with thoughts of her, her eyes through glasses, the innocence of lilies about her, the way she looked so surprised, he having kissed her. Not planned, no he didn’t plan the kiss, he was just going to talk with her, get to know her more and better, when the impulse to kiss, over came him, as if some rarely seen fish of the sea had drawn him into depths he'd not known. He sits on the school bus, got on before she had, looks out the window, shy of seeing her, now wondering what she'd say after that kiss, her reaction. Trevor says softly something about the Frump, he doesn't turn, looks at the kids waiting to get on the bus, excited, engaged in their conversations, laughing. He is aware, that she may be on the bus now, he is so self obsessed, he can hear his heart beat, thump through his chest. Trevor next to him, talking across the aisle, says something about her, but he isn’t listening, stares out. He feels as if he's under a microscope, eyes gawking at him, words around him. Maybe others saw the kiss? He didn’t think about that, never gave it thought. The radio is on, the music blares, some one is singing about love and missing her. He relaxes as the bus move off, senses no one is aware of the kiss, no talk, or chatter of it. Even Trevor, who is the vanguard of gossip, says nothing about that at all. John is aware she sits across the aisle, a little bit back. He could possibly see her, if he glanced over the top of his seat, but he doesn't, he looks at the passing scene, trees, hedges, fields, cottages. He tries to calm his beating heart, the thump seems almost audible, as if the whole bus can hear its thump. He closes his eyes and thinks of her, the lips kissed, the eyes behind her spectacles, her mouth, the way her words were stilled by his kiss, were drenched in her virgin mouth; he had touched her, too. His hand had soft touched her arm, drew her body closer to him. She smelt of countryside, air, and hay and fields. Her lips there were feather soft; he could have slept there, lay there, brushed the lips, as if a red butterfly had landed, sought refreshment. He reruns the kiss, in his head, plays it over and over. She is there just across the way; he can almost sense her eyes on him, like feelers reaching over the seats to touch him. He opens his eyes, Trevor has football cards in his inky hands, he talks of this player and that, that football team and this, but all John can think on is the butterfly landing kiss. © 2013 Terry Collett |
StatsAuthor![]() Terry CollettUnited KingdomAboutTerry Collett has been writing since 1971 and published on and off since 1972. He has written poems, plays, and short stories. He is married with eight children and eight grandchildren. on January 27t.. more..Writing
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