WAITING FOR NEXT SUMMER
A late afternoon Autumn sun shines through glittering gold
and crimson falling leaves, drifting clouds leave space
for a shaft of brilliant light illuminating a contour
of wind driven waves no longer heaved by the wake
of cruising schooners and yachts.
A flotilla of stationary ghosts line the shore of the river,
vessels left standing high and dry like fish out of water
losing much of their luster and sleek honed panache
bound tightly in shrink wrap, a moribund shroud
of crystalline whiteness covers anchors hauled up,
gas tanks drained dry and sails unfurled from their boom.
All wait in repose locked on to trailers until next summer
to be dropped back into the vasty deep sea.
The boats must be toys of the billionaire boys
who raked in the dough due to market volatility
making money in hedge fund inscrutability
spinning numbers of derivatives no one can fathom,
plugged into Bloomberg, drowning in data of cooked books
and the flimflam of lease revenue bonds while
awake or in a comatose sleep
These winners must live to get away from earth
searching for sloops, yachts and catamarans
with black ebony woodwork and bars,
stocked with champagne, wine and fine cigars,
surrounded by stainless steel, velvety sofas,
a Teppinyaki style barbeque and a plunge pool Jacuzzi.
The names on the boats reflect the souls of the owners:
“STALLION OF THE SEA,” “BALL BREAKER,”
“MY WAY,” and “PREDATOR.”
The boats are designed in Australia and Pembrokeshire’s waters
of the Milford estuary, allowing their captains the allure of adventure;
they’re resolute at the helm with eyes alive on the binnacle,
keeping the bow in the surge of incoming waves,
salt water spray spattering crowns on sun-broiled bald heads
and drenching manicured beards. Liberated from the folderol
noise of market gyrations, unscrambling the numbers
that dance in their heads, they can barely contain their glee
with a sangfroid view of where sky and water meet.