Death is a rock in my shoe.
Exhaust fumes perfume air with nightmares.
The seductive billboard of freedom has broken legs,
lying prostrate in the junkyard,
a supper club for gathering lizards and dried foliage.
Los Angeles, you smell like a rusted trombone;
monkeys nurse espressos in your syringe dens.
One day your petroleum odor will murder me, good mistress,
With a last crack of the whip;
Sangre! Esta muerto. (Blood! Is dead.)
You feed me spicy murky black beans,
You breathe low Cabernet and choke optical nerves,
You are as blind as a speeding limousine,
You sell oxygen at bars, acoustically tuned martinis
To keep your bewildered pets on their feet.
There are so few angels in your heaven.
Unfaithful lovers creep through your veins like mud.
I will sing songs of your supermarkets;
lyrics that sizzle in the pan, dripping with accidental carnage.
I will hang my shoes by their laces
from your many telephone wires.
I cannot leave you, mistress.
You are a living tattoo,
and you steal my sleep like thunder.