Ballad of the Noxious Neighbor
There I sat in my porcelain throne
regretting what I’d dined,
preparing for the day ahead
my whole routine had timed.
As I finished my protocol
exacting and thorough
the sacrosanct silence was pierced
by a tapping, hollow.
I inspected my surroundings,
with suspicion peaking,
and began to form a theory
of a faucet, leaking.
Small is the span of my kingdom
—to stretch more the simile—
a quick glance absolved the faucets
suggesting something vile.
Like the kiss of doom on my head
fell a single droplet
and another on the carpet
like a chaos prophet.
Soon the tapping became trickle
and the trickle a stream
transforming the peaceful moment
to a storm unforeseen.
Instinct quickly kicking in
I reacted and flushed;
and grabbing hamper and rug
out of there fast I rushed!
Dust and plaster followed water,
a true deluge indoors
putting together two and two
I marched to the neighbor’s.
In pajamas still and knocking
confused more than in rage
the lack of immediate response
I confess I inveighed.
My neighbor is an old lady;
the silence behind doors
and the flooding that continued
made me think of the worst.
Soon a shouting voice, annoyed,
inquired to my showing
I asked: ‘is anything broken?
or, like, overflowing?’
With closed doors and no sympathy
she just simply bleated
‘I don’t know, you call the super’.
I retired, defeated.
With my brave girlfriend enlisted
the super was soon called.
We heard rapping on our door now:
the landlady, appalled.
She too had seen the skies open
intruding in her bath
and when I told her the story
she was boiling with wrath.
She marched up the stairs, resolved
—and a little jaded—
to survey the fountain that now
two floors had invaded.
Eavesdropping like the utter pros
that we’ve gladly become
we followed the conversation
all the while she was gone.
After a fair deal of shouting
in Spanish and English
at last the landlady prevailed
and defused the skirmish.
We welcomed her as a hero:
she came down with answers
And while the flood had subsided
there fell some more plasters.
It wasn’t the first time she said;
cantankerous and old
of this quaint character always
a new tale could be told:
It was not rain or broken pipes
that had been our lot;
no: she was preparing her bath
and she simply forgot!