A poem about a fading actress |
She wakes groping her mattress. Fumbling, she tugs her nightshades off to find her commissioned lover gone. A queasy uneasy feeling ensues, warm pink gelatin after a quake. Trembling, she sits lights a European fag. Inhaling deeply exhaling slowly hoping her coca jitters go with the smoke. Eleven, too early to rise, too early to dial a smile, and way too soon to start a cry. Scared and smoking she finds her way through her home, feels a marble wall, screams into a mike. "Juanita, dame un mocha!" Still scared, still smoking, she takes a line to her boudoir in tune to her silk chemise sliding across her Persian rug. Under a crescent waterfall jetting rain runs yesterday's film and this morning's bleached strands away. Twelve noon, sunny afternoon. "Sven will be here, he'll buff my abs, he'll trim my buns. I'll be new, blonde, - beautiful in blue." Sipping, dragging, sniffing. Java, smoke, and powdered aspirin, old patrons in her Parisian styled room. Inside her rumbling cellar, dessert is settling - gelling. She's okay, she is fine, was just, a slight bit tight. She can take it. She can kick it. She can handle the emptiness, the loneliness, the nothingness that hangs with success. A keepsake smile parts her dabbed red lips. It's Friday, her gold card day. She sips her mocha, fans smoke away, powders her nose. |