1. The first time I walked
    With a girl, I was twelve,
    Cold, and weighted down
    With two oranges in my jacket.
    December. Frost cracking
    Beneath my steps, my breath
    Before me, then gone,
    As I walked toward
    Her house, the one whose
    Porch light burned yellow
    Night and day, in any weather.
    A dog barked at me, until
    She came out pulling
    At her gloves, face bright
    With rouge. I smiled,
    Touched her shoulder, and led
    Her down the street, across
    A used car lot and a line
    Of newly planted trees,
    Until we were breathing
    Before a drugstore. We
    Entered, the tiny bell
    Bringing a saleslady
    Down a narrow aisle of goods.
    I turned to the candies
    Tiered like bleachers,
    And asked what she wanted -
    Light in her eyes, a smile
    Starting at the corners
    Of her mouth. I fingered
    A nickle in my pocket,
    And when she lifted a chocolate
    That cost a dime,
    I didn’t say anything.
    I took the nickle from
    My pocket, then an orange,
    And set them quietly on
    The counter. When I looked up,
    The lady’s eyes met mine,
    And held them, knowing
    Very well what it was all
    About.

    Outside,
    A few cars hissing past,
    Fog hanging like old
    Coats between the trees.
    I took my girl’s hand
    In mine for two blocks,
    Then released it to let
    Her unwrap the chocolate.
    I peeled my orange
    That was so bright against
    The gray of December
    That, from some distance,
    Someone might have thought
    I was making a fire in my hands.

    - “Oranges,” Gary Soto