The slam poet in cords, in denim, rambles from neon beer haven to flybuzz brothel, cracking quiet jokes about soup to shiny junebugs in the relentless moonlight. One hundred dollars in thirty-five bills slowly retreat from wallet toward water-cut whiskey. He’s got a chapbook widely available at frozen yogurt shops across the metro; he’s got a tour in the works, tri-county, every middle school from Shawnee to Seminole; he’s got a collection of ex-girlfriends, made up almost entirely of wizened lesbians; he’s got an MFA from UNC Wilmington, and he shouts this more than speaks this from his treacherous barstool to the sleepy bartender. One of the girls, she takes him upstairs, and to her he says, Your freckles—islands in the sea of your milk-white skin.
The night passes, warehouses are razed, and he watches the loft apartments emerge. The food trucks come. He parks beside them, typing poems made to order out of his trunk. The money flows in, crumpled and sweaty and in one-dollar denominations. The Old Fashions transfigure into Old English. And in his pocket thesaurus he looks for a word. It’s not vagrant, nor vagabond. It’s not homeless, nor wayward. He lies in the long shadow of a Midwestern sunset, starved and shaking. Up from the blackened city shrubs comes an indifferent breeze and just as he thinks the word Pauper, he dies one on the corner of 23rd and Western.