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    The Poet X

    Page 4
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      and when Father Sean places the Eucharist

      onto my tongue I walk away,

      kneel in my pew,

      and spit the wafer into my palm

      when I’m pretending to pray.

      I can feel the hot eyes of the Jesus statue

      watching me hide the wafer beneath the bench,

      where his holy body will now feed the mice.

      Monday, September 17

      The Flyer

      “Calling all poets!”

      The poster is printed

      on regular white computer paper.

      The bare basics:

      Spoken Word Poetry Club

      Calling all poets, rappers, and writers.

      Tuesdays. After school.

      See Ms. Galiano in room 302 for details.

      It’s layered behind other more colorful

      and bigger-lettered announcements

      but it still makes me stop

      halfway down the staircase,

      as kids late to class

      try their best to accidentally

      make me topple down the stairs.

      But I’m rooted to the spot,

      a new awareness buzzing over the noise.

      This poster feels personal,

      like an engraved invitation

      mailed directly to me.

      After the Buzz Dies Down

      I crumple the flyer in my backpack.

      Balled and zipped up tight.

      Tuesdays I have confirmation class.

      Not a chance Mami’s gonna let me out of that.

      Not a chance I want anyone hearing my work.

      Something in my chest flutters like a bird

      whose wings are being gripped still

      by the firmest fingers.

      Tuesday, September 18

      Aman

      After two weeks of bio review,

      safety lessons, and blahzayblahblah—

      we’re finally starting real work.

      A boy, Aman, is assigned as my lab partner.

      I saw him around last year,

      but this is our first class together.

      He shifts at the two-person desk we share

      and his forearm touches mine.

      After a moment, I shift on purpose,

      liking how my arm brushes against his.

      I pull away quickly.

      The last thing I need is for someone to see me

      trying to holla at a dude in the middle of class.

      Then I’ll really be known as fast.

      But it’s like his forearm brush changed everything.

      Now I notice how I’m taller than him by a couple of inches.

      How full his mouth is. How he has a couple of chin hairs.

      How quiet he is. How he peeks at me from under his lashes.

      Near the end of class, as we both stare at the board

      I let my arm rest against his. It seems safe, our silence.

      Whispering with Caridad Later That Day

      X: There’s this boy at school . . .

      C: This is why your mom should have sent you

      with me to St. Joan’s.

      X: Are you kidding? Half those girls

      end up pregnant before graduating.

      C: No exageres, Xio.

      And we’re going to get in trouble.

      We’re supposed to be annotating this verse.

      X: You and I could break this verse down in our sleep.

      It’s not wrong to think a boy is fine, you know.

      C: It’s wrong to lust, Xio. You know it’s a sin.

      X: We’re humans, not robots. Even our parents lusted once.

      C: That’s different. They were married.

      X: You don’t think they lusted before the aisle?

      Girl, bye. Anyways, there’s a boy at school.

      He’s cute. His arm . . . is warm.

      C: I don’t even want to know what you mean by that.

      Is that code for something? Stop being fresh.

      X: Caridad, you always trying to protect me

      from my dirty mind . . . of warm arms.

      C: Sometimes I think I’m the only one

      trying to protect you from yourself.

      What Twin Be Knowing

      As I’m getting ready for sleep, I’m surprised

      to see the crumpled poetry club flyer

      neatly unfolded and on my bed.

      It must have fallen out of my bag.

      Without looking up from the computer screen,

      Twin says in barely a whisper,

      “This world’s been waiting

      for your genius a long time.”

      My brother is no psychic, no prophet,

      but it makes me smile,

      this secret hope we share,

      that we are both good enough

      for each other and maybe the world, too.

      But when he goes to brush his teeth,

      I tear the flyer into pieces before Mami can find it.

      Tuesdays, for the foreseeable future,

      belong to church. And any genius I might have

      belongs only to me.

      Sharing

      Although Twin and I are super different,

      people find it strange how much we share.

      We shared the same womb, the same cradle,

      and our whole lives the same room.

      Mami wanted to find a bigger apartment,

      told Papi we should move to Queens,

      or somewhere far from Harlem,

      where we could each have our own room.

      But apparently, although Papi had changed

      he still stood unmoved.

      Said everything we could want was here.

      And sharing a room wouldn’t kill us.

      And it hasn’t.

      Except. I once heard a rumor

      that goldfish have an evolutionary gene

      where they’ll only develop as big as the tank they’re put into.

      They need space to stretch. And I wonder if

      Twin and I are keeping each other small.

      Taking up the space that would have let the other grow.

      Questions for Ms. Galiano

      I’m one of the first students in English class the next day.

      And although I promised myself I would keep my lips

      stapled together when Ms. Galiano asks me how I’m doing,

      the words trip and twist their ankles

      trying to rush out my mouth: “Soyourunthepoetryclubright?”

      She doesn’t laugh. Cocks her head, and nods.

      “Yes, we just started it this year. Spoken Word Poetry Club.”

      And my face must have been all kinds of screwed-up confused

      because she tries to explain how spoken word is performed poetry,

      but it all sounds the same to me . . . except one is memorized.

      “It might be easier if I showed you.

      I’ll pull a clip up as today’s intro to class.

      Are you thinking of joining the club?”

      I shake my head no. She gives me that look again,

      when someone who doesn’t know you is sizing you up

      like you’re a broken clock and they’re trying to translate the ticks.

      Spoken Word

      When class starts Ms. Galiano projects a video:

      a woman onstage, her voice quiet,

      then louder and faster like an express train picking up speed.

      The poet talks about being black, about being a woman,

      about how beauty standards make it seem she isn’t pretty.

      I don’t breathe for the entire three minutes

      while I watch her hands, and face,

      feeling like she’s talking directly to me.

      She’s saying the thoughts I didn’t know anyone else had.

      We’re different, this poet and I. In looks, in body,

      in background. But I don’t feel so different

      when I listen to her. I feel heard.

      When the video finishes, my classmates,


      who are rarely excited by anything, clap softly.

      And although the poet isn’t in the room

      it feels right to acknowledge her this way,

      even if it’s only polite applause;

      my own hands move against each other.

      Ms. Galiano asks about the themes and presentation style

      but instead of raising my hand I press it against my heart

      and will the chills on my arms to smooth out.

      It was just a poem, Xiomara, I think.

      But it felt more like a gift.

      Wait—

      Is this what Ms. Galiano thinks

      I’m going to do in her poetry club?

      She mentioned competition,

      and I know slam is just that,

      but she can’t think that I,

      who sits silently in her classroom,

      who only speaks to get someone off my back,

      will ever get onstage

      and say any of the things I’ve written,

      out loud, to anybody else.

      She must be out her damn mind.

      Holding a Poem in the Body

      Tonight after my shower

      instead of staring at the parts of myself

      I want to puzzle-piece into something else,

      I watch my mouth memorize one of my poems.

      Even though I don’t ever plan on letting anyone hear it,

      I think about that poetry video from class. . . .

      I let the words shape themselves hard on my tongue.

      I let my hands pretend to be punctuation marks

      that slash, and point, and press in on each other.

      I let my body finally take up all the space it wants.

      I toss my head, and screw up my face,

      and grit my teeth, and smile, and make a fist,

      and every one of my limbs

      is an actor trying to take center stage.

      And then Mami knocks on the door,

      and asks me what I’m in here reciting,

      that it better not be more rap lyrics,

      and I respond, “Verses. I’m memorizing verses.”

      I know she thinks I mean Bible ones.

      I hide my notebook in my towel before heading to my room

      and comfort myself with the fact that I didn’t actually lie.

      J. Cole vs. Kendrick Lamar

      Now that we’re doing real labs

      Aman and I are forced to speak.

      Mostly we mumble under our breath

      about measurements and beakers,

      but I can’t forget what I told Caridad:

      I want to get to know him.

      I ask him if he has the new J. Cole album.

      Shuffle papers as I wait for him to answer.

      Aman signs his name beneath mine on the lab report.

      The bell rings, but neither of us moves.

      Aman straightens and for the first time his eyes lock onto mine:

      “Yeah, I got Cole, but I rather the Kendrick Lamar—

      we should listen to his new album together sometime.”

      Asylum

      When my family first got a computer,

      Twin and I were about nine.

      And while Twin used it to look up astronomy discoveries

      or the latest anime movies,

      I used it to stream music.

      Flipping the screen from music videos

      to Khan Academy tutorials

      whenever Mami walked into the room.

      I fell in love with Nicki Minaj,

      with J. Cole, with Drake and Kanye.

      With old-school rappers like

      Jay Z and Nas and Eve.

      Every day I searched for new songs,

      and it was like applying for asylum.

      I just needed someone to help me escape

      from all the silence.

      I just needed people saying words

      about all the things that hurt them.

      And maybe this is why Papi stopped listening to music,

      because it can make your body want to rebel. To speak up.

      And even that young I learned music can become a bridge

      between you and a total stranger.

      What I Tell Aman:

      “Maybe. I’ll let you know.”

      Dreaming of Him Tonight

      A boy’s face in my hands,

      but he’s nearly a man.

      Memories of Mami’s words

      almost lash my fingers away

      but still I brush upward,

      against the grain and prickle

      and bristle of a light beard at his jaw.

      His cheekbones rise like a sun;

      the large canvas of a forehead.

      A nose that takes space.

      This is a face that doesn’t apologize

      for itself.

      The boy moves his body closer to mine

      and I can feel his hands

      drop down from my waist to my hips

      then brushing up toward these boobs I hate

      that I now push at him like an offering,

      his hands move so close, our faces move closer—

      and then my phone alarm rings,

      waking me up for school.

      In my dreams his is a mouth that knows

      more than curses and prayer. More

      than bread and wine. More

      than water. More

      than blood.

      More.

      Thursday, September 20

      The Thing about Dreams

      When I get to school

      I know I won’t be able to look Aman in the face.

      You can’t dream about touching a boy

      and then look at him in real life

      and not think he’s going to see

      that dream like a face full of makeup

      blushing up your cheeks.

      But even though I’m nervous

      when I get to bio, the moment

      I sit next to him I calm down.

      Like my dream has given me

      an inside knowledge

      that takes away my nerves.

      “I’d love to listen to Kendrick.

      Maybe we could do it tomorrow?”

      Date

      This doesn’t count as a date.

      Or even anything sinful.

      Just two classmates

      meeting up after school

      to listen to music.

      So I try not to freak out

      when Aman agrees

      to our non-date.

      Mami’s Dating Rules

      Rule 1. I can’t date.

      Rule 2. At least until I’m married.

      Rule 3. See rules 1 and 2.

      Clarification on Dating Rules

      The thing is,

      my old-school

      Dominican parents

      Do. Not. Play.

      Well, mostly Mami.

      I’m not sure Papi

      has any strong opinions,

      or at least none he’s ever said.

      But Mami’s been telling me

      early as I can remember

      I can’t have a boyfriend

      until I’m done with college.

      And even then,

      she got strict rules

      on what kind of boy

      he better be.

      And Mami’s words

      have always been

      scripture set in stone.

      So I already know

      going to a park

      alone with Aman

      might as well be

      the eighth deadly sin.

      But I can’t wait

      to do it anyway.

      Friday, September 21

      Feeling Myself

      All last night, I held the secret of meeting Aman

      like a candle that could too easily be blown out.

      Any time Mami said my name, or Twin looked in my direction,

      I waited for them to ask what I was hiding.

      This morning, I iron my shirt. A for-sure sign I’m scheming


      since I hate to iron.

      But no one says anything about the shirt,

      or my new shea butter–scented lip balm.

      And when I slide my jeans up my hips and shimmy into them

      my legs feel powerful beneath my hands

      and I smile over my shoulder at my bubble butt in the mirror.

      Part II

      And the Word

      Was Made Flesh

      Smoke Parks

      Because I wouldn’t go to his house

      (not that he asked me to!),

      we both know that our secret friendship

      can take place only in public.

      Every Friday our school has a half day for professional development,

      and today Aman and I shuffle to the smoke park nearby.

      I’ve never smoked weed,

      but I think Aman does sometimes after school;

      I smell it on his sweater, and know the crowd he chills with.

      But today the park is ours

      and we sit on a bench with more

      than our forearms “accidentally” rubbing.

      His fingers brush against my face

      as he places one of his earbuds in for me.

      I can smell his cologne

      and I want to lean in but I’m

      afraid he’ll notice I’m sniffing him.

      For a moment, the only thing I can hear

      is my own heart loudly pumping

      in my ears.

      I close my eyes and let myself

      find in music what I’ve always searched for:

      a way away.

      After an hour, when the album clicks off

      and Aman tugs on my hand to pull me up from the bench

      I hold on. Link my fingers with his for just a moment.

      And walk to the train feeling truly thankful

      that this city has so many people to hide me.

      I Decided a Long Time Ago

      Twin is the only boy I will ever love.

      I don’t want a converted man-whore like my father

      so the whole block talks about my family and me.

      I don’t want a pretty boy,

      or a superstar athlete, more in love with himself

     


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