Meet Me In Atlanta
In the market of trickery the swarms lie,
like latte drinkers on a Paris street.
One of them might brush beside you, "Pardone moi!"
and reaching into your coat
grab your stash of Traveler's Cheques
and a half-pack of PrimaLux cigarettes.
You have already cocked your eyebrow
in a gesture of comaraderie,
"Hey, it's ok, pal!"
but the picker has moved on
spying a Georgia Debutante
at a few meters distant
clicking away on her Nikon
as thought the Eiffle Tower
will disappear before
she gets to the
end of the roll.
She is laughing
and flipping
a few pounds
of honey hair
sparkly lipgloss
creating a beacon
the thief sidles to
as if by divine invitation.
Her hand is on the camera
but she has left her cell phone
and her Palm Pilot unguarded
in her backpack
and his spider fingers
pluck them from their side pocket
as if brushing dust from a lapel.
She won't know till it's much too late
that these items have vanished
(as has her new-found love of Paris)
crying into an ancient handset
on a phone with a DIAL forheavenssake
to her mother in Van Nuys
that she's been robbed and
wants to come home.
Mother placates as best she can
and promises to meet her at
Atlanta-Hartsford International Airport
in three days time.
They will return to their condo in Buckhead
bushed and pale and needing showers
only to open the door (which wasn't locked)
and realise with heartbreak
that trickery is indeed a market
and a global one,
at that.
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