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At Pegasus

They are like those crazy women
  who tore Orpheus
     when he refused to sing,
 
these men grinding
  in the strobe & black lights
     of Pegasus. All shadow & sound.
 
“I’m just here for the music,”
  I tell the man who asks me
     to the floor. But I have held
 
a boy on my back before.
  Curtis & I used to leap
     barefoot into the creek; dance
 
among maggots & piss,
  beer bottles & tadpoles
     slippery as sperm;
 
we used to pull off our shirts,
  & slap music into our skin.
     He wouldn’t know me now
 
at the edge of these lovers’ gyre,
  glitter & steam, fire,
     bodies blurred sexless
 
by the music’s spinning light.
  A young man slips his thumb
     into the mouth of an old one,
 
& I am not that far away.
  The whole scene raw & delicate
     as Curtis’s foot gashed
 
on a sunken bottle shard.
  They press hip to hip,
     each breathless as a boy
 
carrying a friend on his back.
  The foot swelling green
     as the sewage in that creek.
 
We never went back.
  But I remember his weight
     better than I remember
 
my first kiss.
  These men know something
     I used to know.
 
How could I not find them
  beautiful, the way they dive & spill
     into each other,
 
the way the dance floor
  takes them,
     wet & holy in its mouth.
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