by Richard Tayson

I'm late for the birth-

day party, it's one

of those cool after-

noons when the world

is clear, is made

of glass, the sky

so blue you want to

look up at the very

center of its pupil

in case you get

a glimpse of what

comes after

we leave here. I'm

thinking my lover's

sister is thirty-two

today, but I want

to let time stand

still, let the tourists

go on waving their

America the Beautiful

flags across 49th

Street, let the three

ladies whose hair

is the color of smoke

rising and ghosts

taking leave of their

senses go on laughing,

near the fountain, may

we all not have

a care in the world. But

it's August 23rd, I must

get on the train, yet

a tree keeps holding

my attention, its leaves

luscious1 from the summer

rain, there's a canopy2

beneath which the Pakistani

man I talked to last

week sells his salty

sauerkraut, lifting

the lid and letting out

steam each time he

serves it over hot

dogs, and the man

pays him then turns

toward me, his thick

muscled arm tan

in the sun, the tattoo3:

BORN

FOR

WAR. The day

is gone, the people

around me gone, I am

trying not to forget

that I'm a pacifist,

trying not to pay

attention to his name-

brand shorts and sun

glasses that won't

let you see a glint

of eye behind them,

I'm trying not to watch

him eat the hot dog in two

bites and nudge the woman

beside him who pushes

a stroller, his arm around

her waist as he pivots4 and

sees me staring. Yes he might

leap to the right, grab

my throat punch

me shoot me gut5

me clean as a fish

taken from the black glass

of the city's river street, but

the church bells are tolling6,

people are saying

their prayers three blocks

from here in the hushed

dark. So I take a deep

breath and am no longer

here, I haven't been

born yet, there is no state

of California, no Gold

Rush or steam

engine, electricity hasn't

been invented, people

cross open spaces

on horses, no Middle

Passage, and I watch

the Huns kill the Visigoths

who slice the throats

of every living

Etruscan, a crowning

city is razed7, the virgins8

raped9, one nation

fights for land

to walk on, then are

walked on until

someone carves on a cave

wall, then someone

writes on papyrus10,

until we do it all

again, right up to

concentration camps, rivers

flowing with nuclear

waste. 49th Street

floods back, and the man

with the tattoo turns

away, as if he's decided11

not to crack my skull12

open and drink me

today, the 965th day

of the new century. War

goes into fifth month. The church

bells sTOP and the ladies

get up and walk

toward Radio City

and while I don't believe

in an eye for an eye, I have

a flash lasting13 no longer

than it takes for a nuclear

blast to render this city

invisible, shadow

of a human arm I've torn

from its socket14, its left

hand gripping the air.