--I’M
JUST THINKING OUT LOUD HERE
Hurricane
Javier
One
of us is eating the other
While
the gulls have lost their way
There
are monsoons all around
Lifting
cars off the roads
Shuttling
cities to and fro
Tossing
drug lords into trees
In
the distance a baby wails
Along
with the sour-coated wind
As
the poorest of us float
Or
swim
Or
drown
Down
a water gully without end
We
heard it was coming
But
not how hard
How
fast
How
sudden
Such
is the news around here
A
slow-motion bullet
Dragonflies
will run the world
When
everything finally dries out
Nothing
really damaged
Nothing
really changed
Stealing
Baby Formula
Stealing
baby formula
Is
not as easy as you think
The
aisles have eyes
The
racks are cameras
The
junk food is a caravan of spies
Stealing
baby formula in a mercado
Is
a ticket to a barred room
Beatings
Separation
anxiety
And
revisiting motives
But
the baby formula is there
And
the baby is way over there
Where
you left it
The
clerk has a gun beneath the counter
The
floor is slick with spilled soda
Leftover
blood
And
piss
The
air spiced like tamales
Flood
lights buzzing,
Flickering
like alarms or Morse code
And
still you do it
Stuff
and run
Fast
as a frightened gecko
Never
turning back
Not
sure if
The
gunshots are real
Or
imagined
Each
twhack! a reminder that
You’re
under constant attack
That
you’ve at least
Made
it this far
Beach
Vendor
She
is a hundred years old
Or
sixty
A slow
tortoise
Slogging
down a tawny beach
With
a hundred colors
Slung
over her shoulders
Across
her back
Tied
in a jangly turban on her head
Gems
and stones
Some
fake some real
All
them discovered and
Threaded
together
By
weathered brown hands
One
piece sold
Means
a tortilla to eat
Two
pieces a slight lunch
Three
or four a miracle
Under
parasols
And
palm trees
The
lazy lucky rich ones
Shoo
her away
Time
and time again
While
the tortoise goes on
Her
babies
And
their babies
And
their babies’ babies
Starving
at home
Mewling
for milk
Gasping
for air
The
sounds out of their mouth
Sheer
as a frail scarf
A hiss
Almost
as if they’re repeating
The
same word over and over--
Silver
Silver
Silver, please?
Well
Played
The
boy is my son’s age
A sixth
the size of him
But
dark as bark
Bony
A skeleton
really
Yet
smiling
With
the whitest teeth I’ve ever seen
“Senor,
magic trick for Pesos?” he asks
I hand
him two US dollars
Tell
him to get on with it already
But
nothing happens
“What
the hell was that?” I ask
He
trots across the sloped beach sand
Still
grinning wide
Giving
me two thumbs up
Back
in the hotel room
I realize
he’s filched my wallet somehow
And
I wish he was here
To
watch me smile back
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