Another independence

    They park in a vacant lot right after sundown, neck-craning
    and ginger on the heat of the hood.
    He orders ice cream; the kids to the right and the left of them
    set off roman candles and sparklers and loud whistles
    with blood-thirsty, pyromaniac joy. Tex Mex filters
    through the night and the pounding of top 40.
    He chases down the ice cream truck, trundling along
    on ruts and sage, its pop-goes-the-weasel mercifully silent.
    He offers her a lick of his push-up. She wonders
    when the wonders will begin. They wait, surrounded
    by deeper and deeper strangeness, the night
    pulling them out of their context, into a Buenos Aires
    street festival or a Mexico City carnival.
    Cries for agua agua echo through the lot as one too many
    roman candles incinerate unsuspecting bushes.
    She thinks the moon is translucent, cold sweet
    air that they can bite down upon like the plastic
    drip of his push-up. The moon tastes slightly fruity,
    slightly bitter from the smoke rising from the burning bush.
    She tells him so; he is distracted by the heat,
    their alien journey, her hand traveling up his thigh.
    Then, suddenly conflagration. A thousand outer wars,
    a million inner fires, revelation overhead.

      Shannon Hammermeister
      Copyright 2000