Love Poem: From the Restaurant To Your Van
Marissa La Rocca Avatar
Written by: Marissa La Rocca

From the Restaurant To Your Van

We tipped the waitress too much,
both feeling inclined
to spend our saved-up good right then.
And as the woman at the door
said, "You make a really beautiful 
couple," I stepped out

into the uncertain evening: 
the seven-block voyage 
from the restaurant to your van.
In thirty-something degrees, your 
right hand hibernates deep 
in the pocket. The left, however

dangles free. Like a white crane 
with open feathers, it spreads 
against the black of your pea coat
and my fingers want to strangle 
that bird, but a sign flashes 
"Don't

Walk."  
Your knuckles are lonely notches: 
the vertebrae of a fetus 
hanging limp. And I'd hold you
for nine months if I could,
in the belly of my palm

but we're approaching the corner. 
You dig for your keys
as I wonder how many minutes
are left on the meter.
How many coins it would take
to make time stop beating on.