Flashbacks In A Bottle

By Ellaraine Lockie

The old oak printing press trays holding perfume bottles
on living room shelves sit like a set of diaries
Each tiny bottle a page exuding a time from the past

When other girls collected storybook dolls
and stuffed animals, I obsessed with perfumes
Aunt Mamie’s $1 for birthday gifts
that every year bought a bottle of Blue Waltz
Trips to Woolworths with Uncle Hank for paper dolls
and whatever fragrance I would dab on their and my wrists

Jungle Gardenia on Tarzan’s Jane
Evening in Paris on Elizabeth Taylor
Forbidden for Jane Russell
I was the only 6 year old who went to school
smelling like a harlot

In high school while other girls thrilled to turtlenecks
autographs on yearbooks and boys’ rings
I became promiscuous with olfactory affairs
Thirty cents an hour for babysitting didn’t buy
tie-dye, Polaroid film or Spider-Man comics
But Arpège, Ambush, Miss Dior, Emeraude, Shalimar
and White Shoulders for the proms
Whose dramas now play like 16 mm home movies
though projector bottles with loose stoppers

Friends and strangers who enable my
addiction find immortality in my living room
These patrons of the Perfume Cult rise from bottles
in bodies that sing notes of jasmine, patchouli, hyacinth
rose, myrrh, oak moss, bergamot, violet, vanilla, amber
Anyone who watched I Dream of Jeannie knows it can happen
Coco Chanel knew too when she said
A woman who doesn’t wear perfume has no future

Aunt Bertie’s future lurks in her turn-of-the-century
L’heure Bleue bottle that will pass down to my daughter
Who remembers the earthy iris root scent
that surrounded Montana’s first woman square dance caller
accordion player and solo car tripper
A mannequin in the backseat dressed
in her dead husband’s clothes long before women’s lib

Inspiration for her niece who at five rode a stick horse
Dressed as Roy Rogers and reeking of Tabu

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