On the road for work and drinking on an unexpected dime tonight
in the luxury hotel, having come into solid cash courtesy of
a lucky roll of the dice, I call a friend to come and join me, sharing
wealth I didn’t plan to have; it seems just and right.
“Come and drink with me,”
I say to him. “Tonight we will consume
in quantity, drink like rich white men:
without regard as to cost, on money that came to us
unearned, and with a cavalier disregard
as to damage we may cause or aggravate.”
So to the hotel comes my ragged friend Joe the painter,
decked out in a Lakers jersey and a scrappy beard.
We burn good cigars out on the deck,
fill our hands and hearts with top-shelf booze;
laugh loud and pay no mind to the stares
of those seated all around: him in the oversized purple and gold
and me in a too-tight Misfits T
that had seen far better days, by which I mean
it is just perfect. We drink like any old drunks tonight:
swearing we won’t have more to drink and then drinking more,
not knowing how hammered we are until we stand up
from the sticky, squeaky leather seats and almost fall over.
I pour Joe into a cab and pray I’ve got the address right,
then head upstairs to sit in a cold shower for an hour
before crawling to the bed and trying to sleep enough
to make the morning flight ahead less onerous;
it’s a failure, and while I’m strong enough to hold my puke in
until I’m safely on the ground back home,
there’s not a question in the world that I’m not strong enough
to hold it past the baggage claim curb. I let it go
in the trash can, then straighten up and get to my car
and drive home to collapse in my own bed,
dead to the phone and the mail and the daylight.
When I rise that evening, I say it out loud to my empty room
the thing I have wanted to say for hours:
we really drank like poets last night —
with a full if disguised awareness of what torture we’d soon endure
as a certain and necessary consequence
of holding such windfall gold
in our too often empty hands.