I shared a beer and sympathy with a gnarled, obsolete man Whose wizened visage spoke of unwise choices. He spoke wistfully (though apropos of nothing) of an abandoned diner Near the terminus of a truncated and decommissioned road, Its parking lot an unhappy armistice Of cracked tarmac and scrub grasses, The building still sporting caricatures of the proprietors (The artist a devotee of the Bob’s Big Boy school) Though time had robbed them of the odd eyeball, And a shoulder or elbow had faded surreptitiously into the background. Much of a large sign remained as well, Appearing to be nothing less Than some leviathan’s abandoned crossword puzzle, Fairly shouting “THE B ST DA N STE K BETW N SYR C SE AND OT T WAOR Y UR MON Y B CK!” Nothing else remained, my companion intimated, Save the odd abandoned farmhouse and vestigial fields, With long unmended barbed-wire fences doing their level best To contain the ghosts of bygone and unlamented cows.