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The Basement Bar
A lovely, wooden kitchen set, made for children
Came in
The endless glass bottles of liquor stacked upon an arched, counter, like a fancy bar
Props in the games of my sister and I
Air-pouring the bottles into display cups collected from around the world
A magical, fan favorite of a cup, yellow and green, with a surgery, salted lime etched into the top
Looking like a drink waiters brought to my mom
Everytime we would go
To Cafè Navona
Never drank within the house
We fought over who would be bartender
Just as most kids fought over who would be shopkeeper,
Or ice cream scooper,
Or checkout employee,
A simple game.
Consisting of fancy adult drinks that gleamed in the beautifully renovated lights
Of our basement
On her turn
We were no bartenders.
It was evident.
To anyone who watched our games, and even to ourselves.
No glamorous cocktail sipping, woman
But we pretended to be.
All kids did.
Ignoring the burps and the slurs
And the stumbles
And vomit
Oh the loud, gagging vomit
Cowering upstairs
My mom
Covered our ears, from the painstaking, bloodcurdling, nails-on a chalkboard
Gagging.
Real alcohol, drunk by real adults.
Not the tito’s vodka, or Captain Morgan’s rum or cabernet stacked in the basement like decoration
Eaten away by the endless amounts of dust
Real alcohol.
A real adult drink.
A buttery, golden sip of scotch
I’d always thought, one needed something as strong as scotch to get horribly drunk.
My dad drank beer.
My mom sipped red wine.
My uncle licked away at cocktails.
None of them ever stumbled or blew chunks onto the toilet seat.
Not until the scotch.
The beautiful glasses, covering the table like a display of china.
I’d like to say they were untouched.
But through the dust, tiny, mouse-like fingerprints
Smeared at the clean and glassy, purple, red, white, and brown
Archives of collections
Labels of art
One could notice,
Though not untouched
Always full.
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My name is Nina Oricchio. I am 16 years old and in 11th grade.