She was dead
for almost a year
for almost a year
Before any of her
So-called friends
had the balls
or even inclination
to inform me
And I loved her
Once—on Clinton
Street briefly when
we lived in a hazy
shade of bliss.
Too much wine
I told myself was
all it took to slip
into her body.
But I went in
head first with
no delusions
Unprotected for
the very first time.
I was naked as
the day I was cut.
And I went in deep
and she responded
sweetly.
Her friends and
her family
weren’t exactly
like my friends and
family
and frankly Mister Banksy
stencils were blasé
blasé at the end of last
Century already…
Sorry I digressed.
Where was I…
Yes.
So after meeting
her mother
I knew it was all over.
And after greeting her
father, I couldn’t fathom a
future
with her or with-
out her
laughter.
Then came the storm
and it whitewashed the City
Cars abandoned by the cube
at Astor place
buried in snow
busses barely ran
subways shut down
We walked up Avenue A
down the center of the street
when she turned to me
and said:
“No matter how much
money you make
from your songs
you’ll never earn
a fraction of what I am
going to inherit.”
But she didn’t factor in
the fact that
she’d never live
long enough to ever
see one single shiny dime.
She was never mine
To hold or keep
Just lay with
Temporarily
And she’d never
Stumble ‘cos
She already had
Taken all her falls
I was just a boy
Back then
No one took the time
To try to teach me how
to be a man
though a few tried
to help me be more like them.
Sad-eyed Lindsay
Of the Roosevelt
Re-married clan
I can’t say
With a straight face
That I miss ya’ cos you’re
kinda
Still with me
Smiling in the light
On another sunny day
Waiting for your man
To drop his glassine wares
Onto your filthy table top
with care
I can’t stop
But I just did
2 comments:
I'm sure R**** loved you David.
I'm so sorry for your losses. R and Allen.
And childhood.
At least you know what love is.
That's a good thing.
Really, it is.
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