hai·ku
Pronunciation: 'hI-(")kü
Function: noun
Etymology: Japanese
: an unrhymed verse form of Japanese origin having three lines containing usually 5, 7, and 5 syllables respectively
Your body is on the counter glistening with olive oil still warm from my strong, soft hands.
I stand over you with a ladle of pizza sauce, fresh from the frig.
The sauce is very cold. I see you shiver, just a little as I draw a thin red line from your neck to your throat, down between your breasts, pausing briefly at the underside of one; a favorite spot, making lazy esses down your perfect little belly, all the way down to there.
Warm olive oil Cold pizza sauce My hot tongue and breath.
Helping in the kitchen
ReplyDeleteYour body is on the counter
glistening
with olive oil
still warm
from my strong, soft hands.
I stand over you
with a ladle
of pizza sauce,
fresh from the frig.
The sauce is very cold.
I see you shiver,
just a little
as I draw a thin red line
from your neck
to your throat,
down between your breasts,
pausing briefly at the underside
of one; a favorite spot,
making lazy esses down
your perfect little belly,
all the way down
to there.
Warm olive oil
Cold pizza sauce
My hot tongue
and breath.
Hold still
Sweetheart,
I'm hungry.