Sunday in alphabet city Spanish girls in communion dresses are playing hopscotch on third street where junkies are crabs slipping sideways through currents of undercover officers trying to blend in with the downtown hipsters. Their politeness is always too loud. From a third floor tenement window a weary Carmen Miranda smiles down on the scene waiting for her sweet Raphito with the alligator shoes and Panama hat to bring her Sunday treats. Across the street on a pay phone Pipo decked out in army fatigues is a capitalist with a .357 and a beeper cutting a deal when the bulls swoop down on him scattering hipsters and hopscotchers everywhere. Ralphie, turning the corner surveys the commotion and keeps walking down avenue B. In front of the Gomez bodega he drops a quarter in the phone to tell Pipo's lawyer the news.
GMHC smoke seeped under the door of 8A in the faggot hotel on christopher st. no smoke detector alerted, fire safety director, directed it was 3am and a real gay man's health crisis when 8A occupancy vacated the window grabbing the downspout which pulled loose dropping him onto the street. a neat little black woman visited his coma bedside daily childhood friend from Jamaica said his family was in alaska disowned him when he came out of the closet had a daughter somewhere downsouth wanted her to have everything.
sabado al mediodia me no habla watching channel 41 saturday shy puerto rican chicks zaftig stuffed into tiny bikinis pushing diet drink to would be carmen miranda unwed mothers hair in curlers killing time until satur day night.
street scene Carmen down on the corner where huas and pitchmen are congregated in front of the check cashing place, a white lincoln pimpmobile, rolling probable cause, pulls up, fires two shots to Julio who catches them where he ain't got hands. panicked crowd scatters screaming, leaving the boy for crime scene chalk mark outline, head resting in a congealing pool of 103rd street salsa. a 13 year old bulldagger Carmen Miranda pimproll saunters over to the sweet sad-eyed boy, ever so gently lifts his watch, gold chain, pocket change to a crescendo of squad cars and ambulances.
This is the 90's The skell on the corner of Chambers and Church is passing out flyers for the Baby Doll Lounge "TOPLESS DANCERS 25 CENT PEEP SHOW" I shove my hands into my pockets and push past his advances. Offended by the snub he barks after me "Hey, man! It's okay! This is the 90's."