where my storybook slippers should lie.

  I heard once about hot-coal walkers. Thrill-seekers

  who toe the line between

  this world and the next.

  But I was not made for fire. A chair, aflame

  at the end of the hall, agreed. It’s white vinyl melting

  into a face, aghast.

  Together, we’d assembled it our first month in the house.

  You knelt on a towel and I, on the dog’s bed,

  sorting screws, which allowed a joke in those days.

  The L of the Allen wrench an unfinished question mark.

  In my waking moments, I cannot feel

  the wall of heat. Only your hand cupped

  around mine as you pass me a small clink of nails.

  These are sharp.

  Be careful.

  Chicago

  This is not a poem for the 115ths street Harold’s

  and the men with low-slung JNCOs. Chicken in hand—strips,

  sandwiches, legs. White flight. Their Chicago

  is older than mine. Nor is this a poem for the crooners

  that caress microphone stands like spines. The aurora-glow

  and melting jazz of the Green Mill where Capone wall-eyed

  both doors for the fuzz. Who respond only to the violent

  calls on the weekend, now. No. This is a poem for the red womb

  of the California Clipper. The icy Pago Pagos with black

  cherries in the last booth back. The gang who is really

  a salsa band that lives on our street. The secret Puerto Rican asocio

  with one red balloon on the door, where I broke my wrist

  dancing with the middle-aged boricuas on Valentines day.

  Their tiny pot bellies swaying in front of the yellowing jukebox.

  The city of big shoulders, but no husker. Hog butcher

  tattoos. The burn of a thousand right angles against the fizzing

  sodium lamps. A subway that can’t bear to be underground. A subway

  that dreams. Thunders overhead and makes

  my heart thalak thalak thalak.

  Aurora Borealis in Tennessee

  Like an egg I left in the pan too long,

  my memory of you

  scorched on one side.

  Only certain parts are still soft,

  can be bled open.

  I see your lipstick, terrorist maroon,

  on a bagel in Nashville.

  Drunk and topless,

  hand washing a silk shirt

  in the ceramic blue of my bathroom.

  I’ve filed you under

  Things Only For The Mind

  next to tube tops in Tehran,

  a clean subway,

  the Aurora Borealis in Tennessee.

  Escobar’s Hacienda Napoles

  When it was still something of this world,

  there were fields of Cadillacs, Mercedes

  all maroon. As if they had once been Gringo Red

  but since baked to a color more appropriate

  for the fourth parallel north of the equator.

  Napoles was his woman,

  the jewel resting on Colombia’s breastbone

  between Bogotá and Medellín.

  El Patron’s other mujeres only a skein, squawking

  and fluttering from doorway to doorway

  in the hot, vastness of the house. They sweated.

  Cut slug-fat lines of gum-curling cocaina

  with the iridescent B sides of CDs. Each

  mound its own legend, the slight smell

  and electric white of new chalk.

  The best blow tastes like nails just painted.

  He knew firsthand—sucked the small, glossy squares

  of their fingertips between sips of Aguardiente

  at the breakfast table. The pirujas didn’t stay for free, cabrón.

  Everyone knew that.

  Opulence is 15 hippopotami with purpling skin

  in Colombia’s bone-crumbling campo;

  Escobar had 300.

  African ocelots lazed in windowsill wells

  like overgrown housecats. The bullring,

  a private airstrip—the land’s bad Brazilian wax—

  the decadences bore each other. Each not to be outdone

  by the last.

  Don Pablo raised cast-iron dinosaurs

  out of the ground one October.

  Moses with money. In 1993, the federal debt

  in Colombia was 17 billion U. S. dollars. Pablo Escobar

  could’ve created a surplus and still been worth eight.

  Though, he wouldn’t have, friend.

  And yet—

  to have this history told in secondhand words

  makes it fiction, not fact, for the living.

  Stories aren’t too good to be true,

  they’re too good to be walking.

  And just so, the cars’ blast-out skeletons

  with their heat-chewed rocker panels

  become testament. A graveyard of iron prehistorics

  that remain frozen among the breathing.

  Five hippos thrive, even now;

  they have children of their own.

  His are still alive. They sang, not read, at his mass

  because F minor is the saddest key.

  Today, the muse is his own mausoleum. His empire,

  a museo. If you arrive,

  you will be handed a perforated,

  purple admissions ticket in the empty doorway.

  Keep This Coupon

  It will say in Webster’s English, as you thumb

  its small stiffness in your pocket.

  Cynthia Robinson Young

  Triple Dare

  When I was four I was a stripper.

  I guess I started early. The boy next door

  DARED me, he said

  I wasn’t born from my momma because

  I didn’t have a belly button.

  I had to prove him wrong.

  My grandma told it was time to go

  and get my own whuppin’ switch

  from the thorniest bush in the backyard

  because it “was time for you to learn

  who you should take your clothes off for,

  and who you shouldn’t.”

  When I was five I was too short to hang

  clothes on the rope line outside,

  but not too young to identify

  whose underwear was whose.

  That same boy dared me,

  and that same grandma spanked me,

  but with a different switch that

  she picked out herself,

  claiming I wasn’t hard enough on myself to

  pick a good one that sang in the wind

  before it hit my legs.

  That boy grew up to be a man who

  kept daring women to do all sorts of things

  they shouldn’na

  been doing,

  but I married him,

  because he dared me.

  Grandma wasn’t able to

  teach me a dog gone thing.

  Nancy Beal, 1820

  (grandmother, 4 times removed)

  I found you, Grandma,

  hidden among the Archives

  in a census. Did they even let you

  give your name? Who asked

  the questions, and who

  gave the answers that would define

  your life

  two centuries later,

  giving me so little

  to understand

  who you really were?

  Nancy,

  you have a granddaughter now

  who carries your name

  into a generation

  where there are no slaves

  such as you were.

  She dances to tribal rhythms

  embedded

  in Hip Hop, in Jazz, in

  melodic refrains

&
nbsp; you might have hummed

  unconsciously

  as you toiled

  in a hot North Carolina

  field,

  or baked bread in a humid southern

  kitchen,

  careful not be to overheard,

  determined to remain silent

  when the overseer passed,

  lest it be mistaken

  for contentment.

  Cornered

  I have stood on corners,

  shaking with fear and cold, waiting

  with my sister on a northeastern November

  night, neon blinking “Budweiser”

  in a ghoulish light

  on

  our young Black faces.

  My sister wasn’t old enough

  to protect herself,

  so how could she

  protect me?

  The boys who could be men

  were coming

  toward us. The street lamp

  lit up the mischief

  in their eyes. I wished

  the light would hypnotize and hold them

  in that halo until

  our mother could come out of the bar

  to rescue us.

  But the bar windows were tinted dark.

  No one is meant to see through

  them, dark enough to protect

  the ones inside who start their drinking

  early in the day

  and stop

  early the next.

  Our mother did not do that, she was not like that.

  She was the mother who says,

  “I’ll only be a minute/

      just wait right here on the corner/

         by the door/     you’ll be safe/     I’ll be right back out.”

  We had to believe her.

  She was our mother.

  We had no choice.

  The men who could be boys

  were saying things

  our mother would have never

  allowed her daughters to hear.

  She would have shut them up. She would

  have washed their mouths out

  with Pure Ivory Soap,

  and if they tried to

  spit it out on the dirty street,

  she would not have let them,

  not until she thought their mouths would

  not allow those words to live there.

  But the damage was done.

  I won’t forget

  their words,

  the sound of their laugh,

  and the lie

  that my sister gave to me, that

     “this did not happen/      we will not tell Mommy/   she feels bad enough all the time

  with her troubles/      don’t let her hear any more from us.”

  So she wrapped her protection

  Around our mother instead of me.

  And an hour later we caught

  the last bus running in the city,

  staring out at our reflections against the darkness,

  riding past so many corners,

  some healthy and happy,

  some not so much,

  until our mother reached up

  and pulled the cord.

  Nicole Lachat

  Your Throat Is Gripped with Love’s Pain

  No avenue wet with salt

  No white sails anchored between blues

  Nothing but the line to evoke them

  It is ten o’clock in the morning

  I am uptown and nowhere near myself

  Outside flakes drape the pavement

  The city lives through another white burial

       You smoked Dunhill blues

       One leg over the sheets

       And my legs wrapped around your torso

       Learned the many ways to pray

       With the body

  Down Broadway the afternoon ploughs

  Someone shouts about Jesus

  From a milk carton hill

  We live under the burden of scarves

  Someone steps onto the platform

  Emerges from the underground

       A moment we do not photograph

       A warming dark

       A thing becoming clearer

       The grip of sunlight over a naked body

  I have returned up the six flights

  The voices in the hallway vanish

  You are not next to me

  I’m in another country

  Your bougainvillea will darken without witness

  The sheets are cold

  On the roof the neighbors are smoking

  Of Infidelities

  there were only a handful.

  A natural decline, or be it progress,

  we’ve learned more than two ways of splitting

  a deck. As if every morning were not another death

  they rose to the charade again, to the rehearsed

  kindnesses. She, resuming the position

  of footstool and porter. He, a roof,

  a silk blouse. And because he couldn’t bring himself

  to make a clean cut, he hacked away

  at the bird on Thanksgiving, until, claiming

  he could no longer muster cruelty,

  let the creature squirm until it’d all bled out.

  Amy Nawrocki

  Waiting for the Plowman

  In the morning: Rousseau’s Confessions. Breakfast:

  something forgettable and unfulfilling, toast,

  the white of an egg circling a shiny yolk.

  By midday, the desert of chalk buries the laurel

  and watching juncos burrow under the feeder

  suffices for motion. Blank under its plastic face

  the kitchen dial signals two o’clock with sleek

  anemic hands. Within the hour, sugar held

  in the spoon’s mouth is let go into black liquid,

  and boots, scuffed and sheltered alert the tangled

  knit scarf to concoct itself. At four, shovel in hand

  I depart to do the job myself. The man

  and his truck are nowhere to be found

  even though the blizzard’s end is new

  and he promised and there is a lot of it.

  Lighter than a pile of proverbial feathers

  but sticky and heaping, the first bundle I take

  begins to build a dune around the driveway

  but there is nowhere else to go and no rest

  and nothing to do to lessen the white

  except to bend at the knees and let it fly.

  Literally

  She says without irony or modesty

  I’m literally so irritated, as if irritation

  could be anything other than literal, forget

  the aching hyperbole of so and the blankness

  of those other loosely placed modifiers that fill

  space left empty by the dysfunction of sound,

  the way fireflies pulse unevenly in the summer air.

  She literally calls herself Mary C

  on her cellphone when she asked for Saturday

  night off to attend a “family gathering.”

  I literally was like making fun of him,

  and I told him: I was, like, I never would do

  that and I like can’t even imagine you

  trying to handle a girl like me, you literally

  have been doing a shitty job lately. This was before

  she told her brackishly tanned friend, who

  sported a shiny ankle bracelet and had

  her hair pinned back literally with a binder clip,

  that she had thrown up in the parking lot

  sometime after the office party. You can tell

  this was the type of parking lot where

  white lines had to be repainted and underneath

  some faded ones still gloomed like

  bad eye
shadow on a clown. A very sad clown.

  Literally, the clown is sad.

  Mary C has dark auburn hair, like soil

  found beneath piles of wet and decomposing

  oak leaves that like the stasis underneath

  the layers of newly dead foliage, storm-tossed

  and musty. I guess he has, like, a superiority complex,

  so like I would pick him up and take him on a date,

  so he, like, would feel like he’s accomplishing

  something. It’s very long hair, like long, literally

  past her shoulders, which isn’t that long, not like

  polygamy wife long or whatever, but long enough

  for you to know she has never, in 30 some-odd years,

  ever been confused with someone clownish, or even

  someone with a superiority complex, not with those

  pouty eyes and tailored eyebrows. Clowns, literally,

  do not speak with such elegance or authority, like

  not ever. Clowns are known to stumble and wear

  cherry wigs and awkward shoes and bow ties, for

  crying out loud. So funny, though, like literally,

  so funny. It’s true, few of them mind picking

  up people and chauffeuring them around

  especially in very small cars. Mary C drives

  a Nissan Sentra, so you can understand about

  trying to handle a girl like that. Fireflies, you know,

  filling a really humid night with sparkles, so

  irritating, if you, like, aren’t paying attention.

  Instead of Poems

  Instead of poems, I weed the sidewalk

  and empty crevices of intruders.

  I find it helpful to harvest

  their relentlessness. Maybe dirt,

  maybe blood sacrifices, maybe

  a shovel.

  The words I wished would come

  unprompted, stick like pollen

  to my nose. But the heat has broken

  enough for me to breathe.

  Despite the scarlet beetle

  that has scoured their stalks

  to skeletal canes, the lilies’ perfume

  layers into me like embroidered

  handkerchiefs pocketed once,

  then rediscovered in a pair

  of comfortable pants.

  Instead of poems, I savor

  scents sung by saffron tongues

  and listen to the striated pink

  of unbeatable blooms.

  Bad Girls

  The boy at the pub had blonding hair

  and a round face

  and we were cruel to him.

  If I sat under hypnosis with a police sketch artist,

  I could recall exactly what he looked like, down to the earlobes