On a back street in Mexico City meal sellers tend their stalls, dark faced men feed from ceramic bowls, menus are simple in black-board and chalk everything is flavoured with chilli and huddled shoulders reveal little small-talk. Street lamps throw more shadow than light and gas leaking from somewhere feeds the air with an acrid scent.
I stop for a bowl of chilli-beans, beside me and one over at the bar a young man with matted hair and heavy eyes unwraps a stained cloth, takes a shard from a broken bottle and neatly incises a small vein in his wrist.
He lets the blood drip evenly into a saucer beside him and in the other hand holds what seems to be a quill made from an eagle feather or some large winged bird. Dipping the quill in the gathering blood he begins to write in a leather bound book on tawn-coloured hand made paper.
I watch every move. No-one seems to care or notice that he does this. He writes on and on, scratches a word, dips again - the blood flows more slowly; what has gathered seems sufficient, he spits in the saucer takes a shot of clear liquid (probably tequilla) and adds it to the mixture, I assume this is to stop it coagulating.
My meal and appetite have gone cold watching this process. When the blood-ink is all but used he folds the book away, wraps his wrist in a stained cloth and walks into the street of shadow and meal sellers steam.
The stall holder notices me and approaches: “Si signor this is Miguel the poet of the people. He is coming many times to write this way.” He smiles at me. I pay for the unfinished meal and he says, “The poetry for the people is in his veins amigo, is this not so in your country, are you also having such a poet?”
I leave him. Return to my hotel room. Take out portable type writer and clean white paper