One climbs up a drain pipe. Another, hands
tucked up under her plastic chin, advertises
Care Bears
through her worn-out, silky sleeve.
Another has not yet learned
to keep her trousers up, or use
a knife and fork.
Another (Greek fisherman’s cap
secure on her curls) might have to go to work.
They shine among shadows. They stand beside spray cans,
elaborated mini-
graffiti having been repeatedly
erased by nameless authorities. TRANS RIGHTS NOW,
one wrote—you can still trace
the ghost of the majuscule—on the fire escape.
The gridded and golden diagonals
of the alleyway’s ladders make
a roof over their heads.
Do they invite us to live at their scale,
to fit under their table and sit
at their feet?
They try so hard to represent
a Paradise, an exposure,
a retreat.
One pulls another close—they sit
on their inch-high metal chairs, leaning side
by side by side—without quite
touching, as if they could hold
their own, unaided, in the chill midair.
One rolls up the hem of her skirt. One plays a kazoo.
One hides behind her opera cape.
Another one recently cancelled their OnlyFans.
Two, together, in knee-high socks, drink tea.
One speaks directly to you. No: directly to me.