I do not write loneliness. I do not write poems. Not with the directness of the sun in a desert. Not with their scorching absolutes, their blinding truths. I shut my mind in. There in the dark where I will not be found out. No laser beams to shine on my ugly sides. The gnarled roots of my existence: dried remains of a carcass that was once my body. The same one that was once possessed of a heart and a brain pecked on by vultures wearing the clothes of friends.
Of lovers I have no memory. Only strangers come to lounge at
my table and bed. Strangers who, content, then discontented, went back to
spouses children dogs estates.
There would be mornings when the mirror reflected a pretty
thing. Tall, a surprised lookupon her face. A shimmer on her hair, curly behind
the ear and cropped just so and ever undone. The skin glittering soft. Too thin
too young to look all those lived years. The long bitter days. It was just the
right amount of light coming in through all the windows.
I no longer hold my life any more precious than I would the
fishwife’s next door. Her eyes! Popping out of their sockets as she stands
sideways to watch me scratch dirt bent on the low stool I made. Knees apart.
Splayed toes crawling out of hiding, dibble in hand. Wedging in thin stalks of
sweet potato into cement-laden earth.
There would be salvaged lines yet. A long time hence when
the bones shall have crumbled into dust. For now I hold soil reclaimed from
among packed sand and gravel layered over clay. Boon and bane of the
reconstruction years when cavalries of revolutionists subdivided into couples
and families and moved into apportioned lots and corners the size of a cow’s
dunghill. Fenced in. Gates grating as people slip in and out of each other’s lives.
I converse with cats and wives. Sneaks from Hell! This one,
come lately, is starchy with gossip. She likes to stand askance as I crouch
hacking at the coconut with a bolo she walked the roundabout way from her
kitchen to my side of the fence to lend. On other days I would have wielded a cleaver
at her face like she were finished cadaver. That she is. But today I let her
have her way. Look the terror that she felt as I whacked and cracked open the
shell in the palm of my hand to reveal before her staring eyes and open mouth
not the hoped-for milk but rotting flesh. It spilled through my fingers like
pus on a leper’s stump alive with worms. The same godforsaken nut the househelp
back of my fence threw into my debris-laden garden. She must have been told
that hereabouts what they cannot eat up as young meat is salvaged to be
squeezed dry for milk.
The couple she serves are second-lifer Catholics. In their
youth they tracked mountain trails tubao-strapped, knapsacks on their backs.
Told the peasants the story of The Foolish Old Man, taught the students about
the life of Norman Bethune. Their kitchen window my unwalled fence curtained
and screened from where noises rise on early mornings without sleep. The
clatter of cups and dishes wake me on days without coffee or bread, their own
hunger days of corn grits and cassava tops dipped in vinegar and salt now
riverbeds away, a gauntlet to keep poverty off their children’s way. Their days
at the barricades and the purge they escaped a closed book unfit for the young
to read, like men’s magazines hidden in the attic of kept under the bed. The
clip-clopping of my typewriter’s keys and the heavy falls of books on the floor
horsehooves and gunshots warping their time zone.
Their goodly neighbor has a son whose father they hid from
her. She was a comtemporary, a Gabriela cadre once now making a living
balancing checkbooks and padding cash receipts for multi-donor NGOs peddling
peace. Her brother she would like me to marry. Ask him to sleep over on days
that you’re away,” she liked to tell me. “Better to keep the house safe and you
have free-service security!” The brother himself thought so well of himself
having been asked to fix my door and bedroom window for a cup of coffee and a
little fee. He mistook my wood-hacking ways as female industry soliciting male company.
She herself must have thought he was more than good enough for me. Could strum
the guitar and belt out a Don McLean on top of his peasant origins, just like
me, to say nothing of his time with the peoples army. It was an honor otherwise
well-bestowed, I being by then a has-been writer-activist whose last caller was
a tazi-conveyed married-looking fag with a grocery bag.
Why don’t you sleep with your pathetic brother?” I found
courage to say to her one day. Her chicken eyes blinked at me, only then suspecting
butchery. Now she wouldn’t part with a hundred and would rather ask her
househelp to trust me to repay a pinch from her laundry money. Some mornings of
digging dirt her brother would perch atop their evergrowing fence to heckle me
with spittle. Pthwak! went his sticky charge. He would spit every after looking
my way.
I hack and stab at buried rocks.
I hack and stab at buried rocks.
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