Cold wind comes out of the white hills 
and rubs itself against the walls of the condominium 
with an esophogeal vowel sound, 
and a loneliness creeps 
into the conversation by the hot tub. 
We don’t deserve pleasure 
just as we don’t deserve pain, 
but it’s pure sorcery the way the feathers of warm mist 
keep rising from the surface of the water 
to wrap themselves around a sculpted 
clavicle or wrist. 
It’s not just that we are on 
the eighth story of the world 
looking out through glass and steel 
with a clarity of vision 
in which imported coffee and 
a knowledge of French painting 
  are combined, 
but that we are atop a pyramid 
of all the facts that make this possible: 
the furnace that heats the water, 
the truck that hauled the fuel, 
the artery of highway 
blasted through the mountains, 
the heart attack of the previous owner, 
the history of Western medicine 
that failed to save him, 
the successful development of tourism, 
the snow white lotions that counteract the chemistry 
of chlorine upon skin—our skin. 
Down inside history’s body, 
the slaves are still singing in the dark; 
the roads continue to be built; 
the wind blows and the building grips itself 
in anticipation of the next strong gust. 
So an enormous act of forgetting is required 
simply to kiss someone 
or to open your mouth 
for the fork of high-calorie paté 
someone is raising to your lips, 
which, considering the price, 
it would be a sin 
not to enjoy.





