The finest hotel in the city
is the Grand Bonanza Inn.
Room service is never ending.
The desk bell is huge. Made
of silver. It reverberates for
hours after it is tapped.
The lobby has a fountain
where butterflies gather.
And the bell boys hand out
free Pez dispensers at
all hours.
When Julia Carpenter checks in
for a weekend of work on her
book
the desk clerk does cartwheels.
Ms. Carpenter is given so many
thick and fluffy white towels
that it takes a gurney to wheel
them all up to her room.
Because the Grand Bonanza Inn
honors and respects journalists.
No matter what newspaper
they work for.
Even if it's the local
Nickel Shopper.
This particular weekend
Ms. Carpenter tells the fawning
desk clerk: "I've had an epiphany
with my book."
The clerk chuckles richly and
deeply (for he is very obese
and sings bass in the Sangerbund.)
"That's wonderful!" he exclaims.
The desk clerk gathers all the
hotel staff to hear Ms. Carpenter's
epiphany.
They perch on the thickly padded
leather lobby chairs, all agog.
"I'm writing it in Sanskrit!"
she announces triumphantly.
Several chambermaids faint
during the ensuing uproar.
And a man who looks like
Fritz Feld turns to the camera
to say "That's all folks!"