by Rosa Alcalá
I remember the fine pleats of your tunic, how they found you among the funerary rags. Your bicep, evident. The crease of your inner elbow. The perfect press that flattened each fold; a funny lie. You were wayward, you wallowed.
I remember pouring buckets of hot water onto ice until your body emerged. That you were preserved in your string skirt, hung low on the hips. Something alkaline made the threads rich, something made you kin.
I remember what you wore when there are now only words. I remember how they chased you out of town in your own confection. A print unsuitable for marriage.
You wove and unwove, but you were no Penelope. You were my mother re-inventing English in her copy-cat fashion, and then you were a boy in a band whose ripped jeans I sold. And then you were a rack of babies, from which I stole one.
Last updated November 08, 2022