Old Europe (2)

Adam Aitken

You don’t need to queue at the entrance

but then so dark your captions now unreadable

since the children left.

Come dine with me in a dead café.

Let’s dance in my old Turkish residence

lined with uncut books

where a cigar accords with taste

and the chocolatier snores.

You may need to sidestep the urine.

Rémy flew home in a djellaba

the armless no glory veteran

the pigeons don’t bother with the bread

the accordion’s sellotaped to wheeze a tune.

The Romanies sell puppies to lovesick tourists

but the light is what we dream,

Saron’s scything searchlight,

the Eiffel Tower a blingy earring

on the ear of Europa.

In the courtyard of a hôtel particulier

she showed me the seventeenth century

rainwashed and dishabille

with a horse in harness

and a Russian lover who won’t spy for money or love.

A warning: the shih tzu twins are locked in

patrolling my millionaire terrace,

the road a crime scene below, a day-for-night

with Citroen and café shoot-out.

You might have to step over the body.

I only come here for summer,

for language, macaroons,

delicious cod. Good thing Cheryl

got the handbag she wanted she’s

so persistent we filmed it.