Mildred, The Miss Albany Diner, 1957

 

The groaning ash drops

from her smoldering cigarette,

she leans on the graying counter

peering past

the pair of demented coffee urns

toward the accused

wooden men who,

perched upright upon stools,

eyes glued on their racing forms,

pray that she will stay

her stare.

 

            “It’s bad,” she says,

            “when your man

            turns out to be a bum.”

 

            Condemned

            they fall

            upon their hash-browns;

            beyond the nicotine window

            a cold wind pounds

            down from Canada

            and slaps the face

            of the insolent street sign. 

Blind machines 

hustled

in the swirl of sullen fumes;

something scuttled

to a crevice

under the jinxed light.

 

More than this I cannot say:

a blade glittered,

one man fell,

another ran,

someone yelled.

           

            No one claimed his broken form;

            he had a three-day beard

            and no wallet.

            The cop’s angry light

            beat upon the concrete;

            across the haunted street

            yesterday’s news

            blew by in a wind

                        just passing through;

            the all-night diner

            was closed.

 

Copyright ©Peter Scott Cameron 2015