Whisky poet! After eating a cold supper, 
the crowd Pat used to associate with 
when she was still at high school 
no longer want to hear you read your poems — it’s after 
eleven o’clock on a hot December evening, and you 
are a little sore-head. Yet from Vegas 
I finally came to your rescue. 
         I hadn’t slept long when I 
awoke, a few miles under the table, sinking 
slowly into everything had come down 
with a faint crash. I’d make up my 
mind later, I thought, should there prove 
to be a reason to do so. Meanwhile I had plans 
to get laid, as in plots to hatch, so I bestirred 
myself from the futile picnic and rang 
to be continued. Mr Penny, who lived in 
my pocket, had a chute I used to slide down 
while fishing for odd jobs: wherever it led to 
told me what I wanted. I didn’t want 
whisky, but I did want the whisky poet 
to read me one of his poems. I’d step 
to the edge of the precipice and signal. Sometimes 
I’d see Pat and her school friends signalling back 
to thank me — clearly they thought I too was
untanked — as I entered the back of the ambulance 
and the whisky poet began declaiming, and his name 
went up in lights, and I blanked out 
as we left the kerb.