At MacArthur and Maple
across from Diamond Market
where the beer and smokes
preach my name, I jam myself
onto a 57 outbound
within a swath of wedged bodies.
On a seat for a human
pregnant, disabled or senior,
you — with spry skin,
no pregnancy or limp —
flick on a lighter
to speed your fingers
through the red tip.
Passengers swerve
compressed stares away
when your thumbprint
singes black. The driver
steers under a green light
as you mercifully
kill that burn.
The front doors swing open
at the MacArthur and 35th stop
for your limbs to tumble out.
You left your lighter
on the seat. A pregnant
woman now sits there.
I slide open a window
to fling your flame
out onto Oakland concrete.
Published in The Town: An Anthology of Oakland Poets (Nomadic Press, August 2023)
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