Los Angeles, 1954

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     by David St. John
     It was in the old days,
     When she used to hang out at a place
     Called Club Zombie,
     A black cabaret that the police liked
     To raid now and then. As she
     Stepped through the door, the light
     Would hit her platinum hair,
     And believe me, heads would turn. Maestro
     Loved it; he'd have her by
     The arm as he led us through the packed crowd
     To a private corner
     Where her secluded oak table always waited.
     She'd say, Jordan……
     And I'd order her usual,
     A champagne cocktail with a tall shot of bourbon
     On the side. She'd let her eyes
     Trail the length of the sleek neck
     Of the old stand-up bass, as
     The bass player knocked out the bottom line,
     His forehead glowing, glossy
     With sweat in the blue lights;
     Her own face, smooth and shining, as
     The liquor slowly blanketed the pills
     She'd slipped beneath her tongue.
     Maestro'd kick the shit out of anybody
     Who tried to sneak up for an autograph;
     He'd say, Jordan, just let me know if
     Somebody gets too close……
     Then he'd turn to her and whisper, Here's
     Where you get to be Miss Nobody……
     And she'd smile as she let him
     Kiss her hand. For a while, there was a singer
     At the club, a guy named Louis——
     But Maestro'd change his name to "Michael Champion";
     Well, when this guy leaned forward,
     Cradling the microphone in his huge hands,
     All the legs went weak
     Underneath the ladies.
     He'd look over at her, letting his eyelids
     Droop real low, singing, Oh Baby I……
     Oh Baby I Love…… I Love You……
     And she'd be gone, those little mermaid tears
     Running down her cheeks. Maestro
     Was always cool. He'd let them use his room upstairs,
     Sometimes, because they couldn't go out——
     Black and white couldn't mix like that then.
     I mean, think about it——
     This kid star and a cool beauty who made King Cole
     Sound raw? No, they had to keep it
     To the club; though sometimes,
     Near the end, he'd come out to her place
     At the beach, always taking the iced whisky
     I brought to him with a sly, sweet smile.
     Once, sweeping his arm out in a slow
     Half-circle, the way at the club he'd
     Show the audience how far his endless love
     Had grown, he marked
     The circumference of the glare whitening the patio
     Where her friends all sat, sunglasses
     Masking their eyes……
     And he said to me, Jordan, why do
     White people love the sun so?——
     God's spotlight, my man?
     Leaning back, he looked over to where she
     Stood at one end of the patio, watching
     The breakers flatten along the beach below,
     Her body reflected and mirrored
     Perfectly in the bedroom's sliding black glass
     Door. He stared at her
     Reflection for a while, then looked up at me
     And said, Jordan, I think that I must be
     Like a pool of water in a cave that sometimes
     She steps into……
     Later, as I drove him back into the city,
     He hummed a Bessie Smith tune he'd sing
     For her, but he didn't say a word until
     We stopped at last back at the club. He stepped
     slowly out of the back
     Of the Cadillac, and reaching to shake my hand
     Through the open driver's window, said,
     My man, Jordan…… Goodbye.