Shelter from the Rain
Crouched below the elevated rail –
stoned, shaking, questioning God.
The rain came down... hard and steady
as a father’s fist; (his eyes looming –
dark as onyx stone);
He tried to drown
out the clutter of sound;
(metal on metal; tracks, scraping).
His body ached for
the double-fisted silence of his basement bedroom
(the cool darkness, shrouded in loneliness,
was certainly a less bitter flavor
than rage).
The rain wouldn’t let up,
and it beat down, beat down, beat down
against the concrete pavement, soaking
into the City’s membranes and arteries – wet streets
turned small rivers; winds whipping trash
along the sidewalk in a rush; people like cockroaches
scattering in the downpour (faces twisted
and sour beneath useless umbrellas – black and blue;
dark circles beneath eyes the color of bruises).
I, he, they, we – all waiting
for the absence of rain.