LISTENING AT THE DOOR

Beneath the door, I could practically see

the wretched slither of tobacco and English Leather.

Hiding on the other side, I heard Mama giggle

through clenched teeth, which meant potential

husband sitting spitshined on our corduroy couch.

The needle hit that first groove and I wondered

why my mama had chosen the blues,

wrong, Friday-angled, when it was hope

she needed. I pressed my ear against the door,

heard dual damp panting, the Murphy bed squeal,

the occasional directive,

the sexless clink of jelly jar glasses.

What drove me to listen on those nights

when my mother let that fragrant man in,

banished me to the back of the apartment,

pretended she could shine above hurting?

I’d rest my ear against the cool wood all night

as she flipped through the 45s—

looking for Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder,

somebody blind this time,

somebody crawling on his knees toward love.