AFP photo
By
Alejandro Escudé
Among the Oligarchs
I wonder: would I be able to survive
an early morning raid in my home?
What exactly does a lobbyist do anyhow?
And aren’t we, in some way, lobbying
for something all the time? Tonight,
I alerted my wife that I wanted more time
with her, that we’re involved in too much
and that she doesn’t need to attend
anymore parent meetings at our kids’
school that all those people do is discuss
banalities—that was too Russian of me,
to bully her into obeying though I had
no leverage, no debt to be repaid.
How do you stay sane Paul Manafort?
Your surname better suited to a class
of military ocean vessel than a man.
You just seem so composed, as if the life
of a traitor were simple. What is a traitor
anyway ? A twitter handle? A hockey player?
A can of caviar? The same footage of you
on the news like a GIF, that Easter Island
moai head of yours, and that curious little
athlete’s breath you take, the same breath
I often take at work. Maybe my life too
is conspiratorial, part of a larger scheme
in which I maintain secret contact
with a Russian agent whom I consider
a friend and ally. And I’ve also asked,
repeatedly, that necessary question
“How do we use [this] to get whole?’
Alejandro Escudé
Alejandro Escudé’s first book of poems, My Earthbound Eye, was published in September 2013. He holds a master’s degree in creative writing from UC Davis and teaches English. Originally from Argentina, Alejandro lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two children.
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