written By
Thank God there was a lock—
though the furnishings were mildewed,
broken, whatever else happens when homes
stand empty. Squatters had come looting,
leaving behind remnants of their own
blotched, stained lives.
Still, it was a place to stay—rough
but still shelter amid the maze
of empty apartment buildings: facades
ripped open, concrete and re-bar exposed,
the fanged fragments of shattered glass
lining windows.
I had moved on, had buried my own participation
in the conflict. But even without my knowing,
apparently the damage had continued.
And imagine! Before this trip, I’d thought
of those days mostly with longing and nostalgia.
As a guest, here for some unspecified event,
I couldn’t reject what passed for hospitality, even
in the middle of this squalor where the matronly women,
protective of their fiefdoms, wanted me gone.
None of my charms worked. No matter,
I was there by invitation. Tomorrow
I’d be leaving.
Then we were on our way for drinks with three men
none of us knew. Downtown had been restored
into a strip of tacky souvenir shops flanking
a neon-lit casino. We picked our way
through an alley of refuse into a club.
The piano man, retro-dandy in powder-blue jacket,
coaxed soft jazz from a battered baby grand.
I considered the man next to me. The sun-glazed
hair on his bare arms glistened. The vision
of what I had to return to—that devastation—
how could I face it alone?
The music continued playing. Our drinks arrived.
Couples shuffled onto the dance floor. His eyes
asked a question. Was this basic human
comfort all I could expect? Was this
my future? It wasn’t much—
but maybe enough?
