She begins by singing an aria
up on 52nd street, right between
the second hand store and the flea bitten dog
tied up outside the Chinese fish market, his ragged bark
setting the tone to her song like a bruised drum.
She is singing in soprano, and although she is dressed
in her one best dress, this is not an oratorio;
there is no church; she has so religion. Her voice
soars out through the treetops and ascends
the high rise building on 54th. A man
in his best suit stands at the window
on the tenth floor and hears the woman,
the full richness of her aching desire, her round
notes as big as cherries, reaching as wide
as one heart to the next. For a second
the man is lost in her song
and he forgets about the double-
sided papers that have piled up on his desk,
the smell of bitumen from
the building’s newly installed roof, his wife
at home with another man, tangled
in the sheets of their new California
King. He forgets about the pain
and regret, forgets about responsibility,
his obligatory duties listed
on the white board hanging against the wall.
The woman’s voice dips low, slow and steady,
warm and thick, pouring out over the streets
and through the alleyways. The man
thinks of his boyhood
and hot chocolate on rain drenched days,
of evenings with his mother at the fire,
that first good taste of French merlot his only time
in Paris; yellow days in the country sun; of love
in the best of times
coursing with nothing short of passion,
through and through his eager bones.