Lower Manhattan
Wooden tables and a dark staircase. The jazz man
lets out a caterwaul coming off the E-train,
bone-metal jaw clenching hard tactics
in the bowery of dishonor.
Tonight,
Every language tied up in your blood
is sticky wet thread slipping through my fingertips,
Thick candle-lit smoke,
A thousand pictures of the sky next to my heart.
All these lonely songbirds in our throats
Ready to splinter.
Someone’s sister keeps running away,
Arms reaching out for the softer parts
A breast, a thigh
Mangoes and fruits
Luxury. You said
seven tables and coughed a lungfish onto your plate.
I was playing it fast and loose,
But that ends on the sidewalk outside.
The milk-tailored men cleaned us out,
Roughed us up, made us
Taste concrete through our hair.
We were probably made of rooftops and bowling pins
Like how the atmosphere changes
When you hesitate,
Sink down on your knees
And let twelve-and-a-half dogs
Fall like rainwater around you.