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    Tijuana Book of the Dead

    Page 7
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    por ríos de piedra

      que me llevan

      detrás de la fábrica

      cerrada—y los montones

      de carros asesinados

      torturados, con estrellas

      en los ojos

      y tú

      tú tambien

      bailas ahora

      a mi espalda

      o

      a mi lado

      y a veces

      yo te sigo

      oyendo música

      en el viento

      de mi vacío

      ardor

      Lines for Neruda

      Ay, mi Viejo . . .

      We were the men who worked the machines

      each anointed with oil on his knees—

      when our families dreamed, machines came awake

      to search us out. I didn’t know, I didn’t know where

      poetry entered. The thousand smashed windows

      that watched empty alleys, did the virus of verse

      blow in them with the tubercular wind?

      Or the poisonous voices of wet oleanders

      on Interstate 5, were they calling my name?

      The electrical smell, the machinery smell,

      the cannery smell, the armpit smell,

      the shoe polish smell, the bakery smell,

      the gas station smell, the gunpowder smell,

      the Thunderbird smell, the V-8 smell,

      the dirt street smell after rain,

      • • •

      the bare belly smell, the open sex smell,

      the hair tonic smell, the wood varnish smell,

      the tortilla smell, the ashtray smell,

      the Catholic smell, the Tijuana smell,

      the refinery smell never hinted at poems.

      The first poem I read

      was the ragged V scrawled

      in a brown sky by gulls

      escaping the garbage dump at sunset

      cutting under clouds

      over the apartment blocks

      going to a sea I knew

      was there across the city

      but never saw.

      And then dear darkness.

      Our lullabies were the inexhaustible keen

      of overhot gears beseeching grease. Our fathers’ nightlights,

      40 watt bulbs strung up on orange power cords: lynched stars

      that swung over their heads, their shadows flapped

      like wings of the machines. Old angels squinting

      at nude magazines they couldn’t read—

      coffee break black and white braille—the smudge of hard fingers

      on thighs,

      Pall Mall ash speckling sad night nipples—a touch of paper skin

      deader than snow.

      How did the Word ever hunt down our hearing?

      The engines of hunger drove us deeper to silence.

      What was it that urged us to sing? What handle

      disengaged the gears, by what chain were we dragged

      from the brink? We lost singers every day:

      one lost to pistols, one lost to flames, one lost to

      coughing night sweats, one erased by the highway. Each one

      wore black shoes,

      workingman soles as rippled as waves with no shore.

      The ironwrack pounded unceasing around us,

      the glass crash, the tire burn, the shotgun,

      the shouting. Blue exhalations sighed from our cars—

      were the vowels of my song gasping into the air?

      Was the ratchet of pistons this consonance drumming?

      Why did poetry come forth from cables, from coils,

      punctuated by nails in veils of rust

      to the beat of Border Patrol helicopters

      from words as simple as hermano, hijo, compañero,

      esperanza, amante, dolor—

      how did you come to me to lay mothwings of song to burn on

      my tongue?

      Pinche Ernesto

      In Tijuana, of an evening

      Don Ernesto James

      Drained his tequila, loaded

      His revolutionary .44

      Revolver and cursed

      The Goddamn moon

      Took aim above his outhouse

      And fired off six rounds

      Into its eye

      As he reloaded

      We scrambled under tables

      La Flaca yelling

      “Pinche Ernesto!

      Kill that moon if you have to,

      But don’t kill my chickens!”

      As his bullets flew

      Across the sky

      Like burning little moths.

      Tijuana Codex

      Tijuana to here—

      What a long rough walking road—

      A red road, my road.

      The Tijuana Book of the Dead

      Bury me standing.

      Bury me facing

      West.

      I could have been born

      An eagle, or

      A serpent caught

      In its Mexican beak

      But

      I was born the son

      Of coyotes

      And crows.

      I was born destined

      For the temple of toil: born

      To feel my heart

      Fed to the blind

      Fleeing sun.

      • • •

      Mazehalcuicatl Chichimecayotl.

      Bury me

      In Tijuana.

      Bury me

      Standing.

      Bury me

      Facing

      Where the sun

      Has run,

      For the east

      Is abandoned.

      The gods

      Are choked

      With washing machines

      In their mouths.

      Bury me

      Among tired men

      • • •

      Who smell too bad

      To enter banks.

      Bury me

      Beside women

      Old at 23

      Who stoop

      To garbage gardens

      To pull bones

      From the ruins

      For soup.

      Bury me

      Among children

      You have spit on

      In fields

      Of shattered glass.

      Pick there for my name

      Like the ibis

      After mustard seeds.

      Give me back

      To the poor.

      • • •

      I was born

      In the city of coughing.

      Rough nights ran wet

      In every arroyo.

      I was born into hills

      Where tubercular girls

      Brought up their lungs

      In mortal hymns

      Coughed their spume

      Into steel cups

      And dumped their singing

      In the mud.

      Six inches

      From my bedroom window

      Holy

      Holy

      Holy their blood.

      Holy the spores

      That rose from their foam:

      • • •

      Holy the pollen

      Of dying

      That found me

      And fed the roses

      Of fever

      In my chest.

      I

      Want to go home

      To Tijuana

      I want to be every

      Fatcheeked kneeling boy

      Firing marbles in the grit,

      Suffering through morning mass,

      I want to fly

      Newspaper kites, I want

      To be every Mixtec woman

      My aunt ever kicked

      For asking for pesos

      Outside the pollo frito

      Stand

      Nursing a coughing little mouth

      At her black nipple.

      • • •

      I want to be that mouth.

      I want to be that nipple.

      I want to be that milk.

      Bring me back

      Ten thousand times


      Bring me back: let me be

      The whore in La Coahuila,

      The sicario,

      Let me be the Jesuit

      At tacos El Paisano,

      Who still believes

      In Guadalupe and the lotería,

      In Quetzalcóatl—

      Let me die

      There again, let my dust

      Mix among those that remain

      Of my father.

      Let me paint

      A velvet Elvis.

      Let me laugh

      Until the coughing stops.

      • • •

      Bury me later.

      Let me live

      79 years

      In la Independencia,

      Raise chickens, bananas,

      Cilantro. Let me sire

      20 bright Mexicans.

      Burn incense.

      Kneel in prayer.

      Every night

      Let me sleep

      Beside my old woman

      Snoring.

      Never

      Learn English.

      Dance to accordions

      Play boleros

      On a dusty out of tune piano

      And die

      At dawn

      On the Day

      Of the Dead.

      • • •

      So I might learn

      To sing these songs

      And make the world

      Listen.

      Bury me

      In Tijuana.

      Holy the coughing.

      Bury me

      Standing.

      Holy the coughing.

      Bury me

      Facing west.

      Allá.

      NAHUI

      Insomnia Machine

      What is that engine coiled in cables and red hoses

      That lurches at the darkest hour

      As it pumps, pumps, churns

      Desire and nightmares out the mainline—sends

      Hot want into the alley down the hall

      In the window as it rusts itself

      Keeps us awake all night, all night, all night

      Like a motel neon sign in the rain: pounds

      To death: that working machine

      That makes us weep that imagines God that

      Drives the pistons that slog in hollow graveyard

      Shifts, that dynamo that suddenly snaps and

      Wrenches itself apart as we shout: human beings

      Once called it a heart.

      16 Lane

      For Andy Prieboy

      All my people are larger bodies than mine, quiet, with voices gentle and meaningless like the voices of sleeping birds.

      B. H. Fairchild

      1.

      Gone now, bulldozed for parking lots, gone as sure as the old

      men in the corner seats

      with their yellow White Owl fingers and green

      suspenders. Gone

      as childhood and the 4th of July, as lost as the kisses frosted on

      your lip behind the public

      pool that summer you were crazy with the earplug of

      that Japanese radio

      w/ yr antenna telescoped to the moon where some

      33rd Degree Masons were planting flags & you were

      looking into yr first bikini top. Gone.

      Fever Tree, Spirit, The Chambers Brothers, Iron Butterfly.

      Gone too the lonesome uptown wraiths who spent their last

      hours of this used life

      in the floor polish and cigarette smell of Hillcrest Bowl: those

      wretches: those hard

      wood 16 lanes: those jukebox records: those ghosts: that

      mothball peppermint urinal trough smell: gone

      those lavender/ blue/ red/ black & yellow two-tone bowling shoes

      tucked into cubbyholes like letters in a demolished country

      mailroom,

      sizes inscribed on each heel in lathed leather cut-outs: 7,

      8 ½, 10, 12 ½. Ladies’ 4, 5, 7 ½. Gone the cans

      of fungus killer sweet talc powder, flat as the coat pocket tin

      flasks the rummies

      tipped in the shadows to hail every strike for the

      Traveling League All-City

      Tour from the Bowlero to Poinsettia Lanes to

      the Hillcrest.

      Gone the stains of sweat etching delicate housewife footprints in

      those shoes.

      Gone their rental balls, their pink-swirl, their red, their see-thru

      orange, their pocked

      black deathstar balls. Three holes each ball infused

      with fingerprints. Fingers prodding the dark holes since 1948:

      thumbs of cops,

      of hookers, of Mexicans, sailors, soft boys with their

      mamas’ curves & grease

      in their flat-tops & fingerless bowling gloves as if this

      here was a sport.

      My old man’s fingerprints.

      Cream, The Electric Prunes, Steppenwolf, Donovan.

      You couldn’t call my old man my old man.

      What if his girlie heard that bit of gringo disrespect.

      She of the Wayne Newton records and the red cowboy boots,

      the five dollar Chanel

      Tijuana copy perfume & the stretch pants that cupped

      her unbearable bottom,

      that tucked into the sweet tight line of shadow

      behind her

      that awoke even the old cigarmen and made them kick.

      Tenderest midnight

      of her body that smelled night and day of rain

      in spring aspens. Oh.

      While her husband far dntn was tucked under rotten Buicks

      in the rusted-out light of his failing Shell station: he

      trotted out

      when my old man clanged over the bell-hose thinking they were

      pals, thinking

      my old man was teaching his li’l cowgirl how to bowl.

      Filled ’er up

      to the radio spurt and called my old man Al.

      Johnny Cash, Jimmy Dean, Kitty Wells, Peggy Lee.

      If you called him my old man, you’d get one of the looks,

      those looks

      he played like the termite-chewed Thomas organ in his

      bedroom, working

      on tangos & boleros for the night he graduated from

      shoe rental

      & pin-machine Brunswick tending

      to the Rip Van Winkle room

      upstairs,

      dark in its red purple velvet and bubble lights, white women

      and whiskey, cigarette smoke & maraschino cherries on little

      plastic swords. Gone, gone, every naughty

      cocktail napkin

      w/ its big breast cartoons gone, every Benson & Hedges 100 butt

      w/ coral lipstick

      prints, every lame come-on, every sigh, gone: pried

      from the earth by a diesel Cat, tracks clotted w/ mud from the

      last time

      they decommissioned a useless memory & scraped a graveyard

      downhill into a canyon. Gone now, man, and even his shirt

      w/ his name stitched over his heart is pulled into threads in

      pigeon nests.

      I went yesterday to see what remained and just a taco

      stand stood

      behind a mall. It had the same name as my old man: how do you

      like that happy crappy

      as the old sports used to say.

      And that name is Alberto.

      2.

      If it is true that everything good fades to zero, it is true that rust

      awaits also everything bad. The cancer cell starves to death

      when the patient passes. Even dreams run out of blood

      when you die, even memories. Tumors punch a time-clock.

      Not one of them noticed the Hillcrest then,

      and now I am the only one left to tell.

      What is there to tell? Nothing. Another song of a clanging place,

      noisy with echoes: nothing men and no
    thing women w/ nothing

      days dropped

      dimes in the juke selectors w/ their white & silver

      flap pages

      in their windows like vertical pies—and the pies all

      drooling and

      old beside the juke on the long burger grill counter—

      one fly always caught

      in the rack, drunk on cherry juice on its back kicking

      black whiskerlegs

      & going zzzzzzzzzzzzz with its wings making a circuit

      going nowhere: nothing songs about nothing loves for

      those who

      had nothing going on in their beds back home or longed

      for nothing to take them before they had to get back—a car

      wreck, a heart attack

      or the lottery, a lover or a miracle, or maybe

      Armageddon would finally come and the crazy Negroes and the

     


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