BAMBOO BLINDS

The broken bamboo blinds are down 

even though the sun is not shining 

directly on this part of the house in Bali 

where a fan palm leans against the balcony 

and a purple orchid paints the scene 

with color.  

 

I try to imagine the beige blinds as a map,

whether modern, ancient or imaginary 

is as yet unclear. Hanging down is a broken

cord, twisted, unraveling, but upon closer

examination could be Sri Lanka or 

perhaps even South Africa.

 

The picture then switches to Latin America

and I’m elsewhere, this time in a fancy hotel 

in Panama with a lawyer friend of Nixon’s,

there to rescue his client, a strange old lady

who befriended me years before she broke 

down in the Canal Zone. 

 

Loud knocking on the door surprises 

both of us. “Why are you in our country? 

When do you leave?” asked one of the five,

heavily armed men blocking the doorway.

I focus on a small chameleon moving above 

military helmets. 

 

“Noriega’s men,” whispers my companion 

as we try to act nonplused at the bandoliers, 

the drawn machine guns. “Thank you for 

assuring our safety in your scenic country,” 

says the attorney, his ingratiating smile  

obsequious, obvious.

 

We escape to another hotel where he gulps 

whiskey straight from the bottle. Words

slurring, he tries to seduce me, and if he 

weren’t so serious, almost comical. The 

next day the old lady is released and we

cart her home.

 

I’d forgotten this time, this nightmare, until 

the blinds jogged thoughts of this countess 

whose sanity was destroyed by neurosyphilis. 

She left her fortune to the attorney, her art 

collection to a museum, and for me, yet

another adventure to share.