It
I saw it on my way to work and it looked like a number. It was thin. It had smooth skin. It had a sharp nose and chin. It was a one or a zero. Static. It came in the mist. It left rings on the table and a black and white photograph. It sang, “So long Marianne, it’s time we began . . .” and cried to the seagulls, glowing like amber. It smelled like magnolia. It was some masquerade, but it opened its mouth and a voice embossed in silver rose out, “Do you want to go dancing? Or do you want to come home?”
Self-Portrait as Venus with Adonis in San Francisco
Into musty hotels
up back alley fire
escapes through windows.
The Emperor. The Lyric.
A single bulb hanging. To be with him,
I am drawn
down by his habits
in plumes of gray doves.
Fixing the puddles of gutters
I see I am thinned.
“No, I am waiting for someone,”
for hours, like a dog,
down the street from the hustlers’ bar
with whistles
and slow-rolling cars
for him. A vision of fatality
leaking like a cracked
cell-phone screen.
A man being led
down a dark alleyway
returning, needful,
black tar in hand.
The fumes
of vinegar, the concrete,
the syringe–
“No, you go first. You need to get off.”
Oh, and so what? I say,
I am pained, lover, but I give it to you.
Confederate, I would not
have you be other.
Let’s get away. Let’s sleep
near Mission Dolores
tonight. Gold foil cherubs
sit still
their form ending in curls.
Nothing has those classical adornments, no
muses anymore.
______________
Abigail Dembo lives in Berkeley, California, and is currently a poetry editor for Southland Alibi. Her poetry has appeared in the Berkeley Daily Planet, Ursa Minor, SlipStream Magazine, and other places.
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