Before adolescence reached me, each morning
I marveled past the Habana Inn, a degenerate haven
hidden plainly off Route 66. My cheeks clenched
as I caught in the rearview oblique glimpses
of men, their beards groomed to signal discretion.
39th and Penn: a revolving sleuth of leathered pickups,
hot rods in cruise control. I numbered plates
skipping town from out-of-state
as we got groceries at what was Homeland,
which once was Safeway, but now is Goodwill.
Braum’s banana split as alibi, I tracked the bears
shuffling by. I swooned, swore I’d gussy up,
brave mountaintops when I came of age,
embrace my guts. Daddies and sissies alike
pilgrimage toward the obvious: The Village.
Boystown. P-town. WeHo. Any Christopher Street.
I exhausted every imaginable vulgarity stewing beyond the block:
cowboys, truckers, pastors, oh my. Had I snuck a peek,
unveiled the skirt, I’d find naught but night: damp
technicolor carpets, hot tub swimmers, drapes
finished raw, ultraviolet ripe for new owners
—an LA lift to keep the grit, strip the must,
and redevelop. No longer is the Habana. I mourn
each time a classic logo debuts a thin sans-serif makeover—
the pylon sunrise marking the resort, now absent
from the I-44 skyline. Maybe it’s better
to clean up, chlorinate the pool more regular.
I wouldn’t know. I’m still blue in the face,
staring out the dash, yearning for first light,
ignorant of what I lost without ever coming in.
Copyright © 2024 by Chrysanthemum. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on July 4, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.