Few cats would wander into that little hotel

nor would a woman I might have looked for,

where the only sounds were of pigeons

outside the front door and the voices of drifters

sunk in overstuffed sofas in the open lobby

with talk of being writers, artists and rock stars

 

All the hopes I had hefted to that place

accumulated before me,

more than enough granite to build a temple

to worship self-doubt and despair

 

Each tower above the street was inscribed

with a famous name and I wandered below them

through the littered streets so late that night

only taxis clocked more miles

 

I want to remember it was raining,

the beer in the bar warm

and the beef bad

 

No, the piano bar was hopping

with young good-looking women,

the man on jazz piano knew

where he wanted to take us,

and the weather might have been clear

 

The names on the business cards

I found in my pockets the next morning

were the same as those on the skyscrapers

that hung so heavy over me,

and my memory of that night comes down

to mixed nuts in tiny dishes, bottle labels,

lonely strangers, days, seasons…

 

Ah, that’s it! Spring, Sunday night,

in the kingdom of rats and roaches