Airports Are Quiet Now and I Can’t Get To You From Any of Them

Cinnabon is open but all they have is coffee
a man wiping the counters tells me adding three creams will hold me over
the departure lane is overrun by white Dodge Rams like yours
some only have room enough for us
my favorite jeans are out of style my skin looser
Hudson News magazines tell me I’ve got it all wrong
dirty water sky emptied of birds I had forgotten
the loneliness of spending three hours touching elbows with a stranger
when Katrina hit I called to ask if you’d seen the water
in the hotel lobby where we’d been standing weeks before
that street where a man drove his Cadillac into the bumper of a yellow cab
because he was rubber-necking at me standing on the sidewalk
wearing those pants you loved leopard print stretched
across all I had to show for myself
imagine an inhale that holds the low belly in lifted into rib cage borders
all sternum and slack-jawed sips of breath
I crisscross a cardigan over my chest
try to name the sound of a small boy who can’t yet tie two words together
whose finger points to the tram overhead carrying travelers
shifting bags from one shoulder to the other
his grandmother follows his gaze there it goes say bye bye
his brow furrows as the red machine disappears into an empty hole
its passengers leaving for wherever gone is