June 22, 1958
by Ron Koertge

When I came home from college, my mother told me

Marco had called and wanted to go out, but

she wished I wouldn’t because everybody said he’d

gotten involved with the underworld.

I laughed at her. I pictured Pluto, the river Styx,

and a big dog with three heads.

We drove to St. Louis in Marco’s new convertible. He

paid for drinks, he paid for dinner. When

we got to the Grand Burlesque, he nodded at the girl

who sold tickets and we sailed in.

“Sit in the front row,” he said. “I’ll be right back.”

I was trying to figure out if Rose de la Rose

was a tautology or a pleonasm when Marco showed

up with cigars and spiked Pepsi. We

watched the strippers and laughed at the comics

until one of them said, “Better than being

in the shower with Ronnie Koertge.”

I was stunned to hear my name sewn into a routine

as old as time. But not as stunned as

afterwards in the Show Bar next door where girls

hung on Marco until he told them to hang

on me. “How long you known him?” asked Rose.

“Since first grade.”

Nothing in any book had prepared me for the gun metal

taste of her mouth. “If you had a good time,”

she said later, “Tell him okay? Don’t forget.”

We drove home late. Crossing the dark Mississippi

I put my head back and named every

constellation—a real accomplishment for somebody

who didn’t know anything at all.

 

Originally Published in Cider Press Review, Volume 2.

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