Sebastian Matthews 
        _____ 
       Coming into Lexington, 
        Virginia 
        
       
        If I were a drifter in town  
        on foot or off some old Trailways,  
        free of the lifelines and buoys  
        that attach to lives like mine,  
         
        I’d head for the bar, for  
        the lonely woman dropping  
        back a shaft of vodka  
        for lunch, sword-swallowing  
         
        100 proof sadness—her reflection  
        in the mirror smiling as if  
        I were an angel who saw her  
        exactly in all her splendor,  
         
        who knew that she’d leave  
        the man degrading her  
        by holding her to a treaty  
        she’d not signed. Miraculously,  
         
        I’d have money, clean with pressed  
        clothes and a rich man’s smile,  
        and I’d lay down bills for a room  
        in the town’s only respectable  
         
        boarding house. And after a long  
        shower in which I name aloud  
        in the breezy room all the women  
        I’d ever slept with, or kissed,  
         
        I’d step out into the streets,  
        find a fancy bistro with glass tables.  
        At the bar: my dream woman,  
        surrounded by cologned men,  
         
        busy admiring themselves  
        in her company, who make room  
        reluctantly. Before taking her  
        to our table, I’d hold forth  
         
        on baseball, evoking the great  
        Satchel Paige. Outside, the gorgeous  
        blue night and the sparkle of lights  
        dancing in all the car windows.  
         
        And across the street, an old Civil War  
        graveyard that we dream full  
        of former slaves fallen beside soldiers,  
        Confederate and Union, stones worn  
         
        smooth from the hands of bored  
        schoolchildren. Our meal as elegant  
        as wedding cake. And while I’m at it,  
        this sad woman growing lovely in aloneness,  
         
        dropped hands in mine, laughing,  
        like at a jazz club, drenched in joy,  
        and the bassist coming off a mountain- 
        top solo. And, later, I take her  
         
        to my room, watch her navigate  
        the old steps, let her undress in front  
        of me—dropping her cares, one piece  
        at a time, onto the unswept floorboards. 
        
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