Blackly digging in the ten o'clock hour - the rain already came and went - the District is dying of moon-steam, a summer that chokes even the princes of air.
I am mortally alone. My chaperone, a brimming glass, turns a blind eye to my piling thirst. Pylons of shadow gather in the alley like barren trees.
My monstrous shirt clings to me, accentuating the beer-pounds. I pray for a swift end to this grit-grind, a legacy of revolving abandonment.
Numb, dulled, I stare out at the sparse traffic cleaving to the bitumen, red lights & bare legs floating by in the wheeling hour, tone poems of pale flesh and sad laughter.
This is very close to the bottom: the scotch that scrapes my tongue clean, the freshly washed glass, the beckoning bed that promises only dead dreams, pillows of sand.