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      December 5, 2024Motel Night AttendantMark Evan Johnston

      Out here on Route 38,
      I’ve learned the difference
      between noise and sound.
      Sound is familiar: the whirr
      and clank of the ice machine,
      the clink of a radiator,
      the sough of the wind,
      an occasional train.
      Here noise means trouble.
      Number 32, angry
      with his wife, throws
      a Gideon at her head.
      I only hope he doesn’t
      throw the lamp.
      I sit here beneath
      sixty watts of darkness
      reading a trash novel,
      waiting for the cheap tinkle
      of this small bell to sound
      but it never does.
      Everything is in order:
      the linens (call them that)
      for tomorrow’s chambermaids (call them that),
      the books, the Coke machine.
      I make sure the Planter’s peanuts
      don’t turn green
      behind their sun-struck plastic.
      Sometimes I almost hope
      for trouble: a random shout,
      an untimely splash in the pool,
      a crying out that doesn’t
      have to do with sex.
      I want to have to go down
      to Number 18 and set
      things straight.
      Years ago (here comes old Krebs),
      we had a murder here,
      before my time.
      (He works the night-trick
      at the mill.)
      Some loon got trashed
      (Krebs doesn’t stop to talk)
      and poured beer on his wife
      while she was getting off
      on the Magic Fingers.
      (Krebs always leaves
      his shoes outside his door.)
      He cried and tried to blame
      it on the management, but
      it came out he tampered
      with the wires. Dupard
      was his name, Canadian.
      But don’t get me wrong.
      I’m not looking to open up
      Number 10 and find someone
      dangling from the south end
      of my sheets, or blood
      pooling from under
      the bathroom door.
      Krebs, a night’s work himself,
      has the country music on too loud.
      The 3:15 sounds lonely,
      the bell stands mute,
      the buzzing of our new
      neon sign would like
      to drive me crazy.
      But that’s not a noise.
      That’s a sound.
      No trouble tonight.

       

      from #27 - Summer 2007

      Mark Evan Johnston

      “A few years back, when I would visit my daughters outside Pittsburgh, I stayed at a small motel. It had the air of being the sort of place where someone might have been murdered once, or would someday be murdered. I realized as I thought about it that this impression was created by the expectant silence of the place, a silence into which random sounds would occasionally intrude. In ‘Motel Night Attendant,’ I have attempted to register how these small intrusions might strike the speaker of the poem.”