Racquetball
Years after giving up the game 
for good I still dream of turning 
up late to a match juggling 
a chipped red racquet, 
high-impact lenses, 
salt tanned right hand 
glove and two 
blue balls fresh in the can, 
my dream court receding 
down darkened halls, 
a warren of identical doors, 
portholes slashing avocado 
carpet with watery cross ties,
florescent flickers that merge and pool, 
flushing me into flat light within
a stark white cube to toe the red
service line once again only to find 
my forehand serve impeded 
by stacked furniture and packing 
crates arranged into the crooked lane 
plat of medieval Bruges.  
Racquetball,
a game of angles 
gone sadly out of fashion, 
the MacGuffin in my dreams, 
as it was in my playing days 
when you were my true opponent, 
King of Center Court running me, 
stroking passing shots, methodical
while I hurled myself heedless 
headlong into walls, losing on points, 
nursing trophies of bruises.  
 
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