Dust, Silence and Rats

Dust, Silence and Rats

 

The bottom-line conversations

The notion that every day is a Monday

The awkward feeling of riding

       the elevator with a stranger

       who is carrying a lamp a big lime

       an empty can of beer.

 

But you really desire the unbroken chain of wonderful.

The Rick James tattoo makes you smile.

The hot boxing in Chuy’s van before your government class

        a long time ago.

Your lousy minimum wage job crush smiling at you

       after your shift ended.

Front row tickets so when they played

      White Punks on Dope you felt the vibrations

      up and down your spine.

You always declined the flan.

The menudo with extra cilantro was enough.

 

Your abuelo made sure you and your hermano

      sprayed down the yard to control the dust

      before you played pickle of kicked the

soccer ball. It’s hard to believe no windows

shattered. The balls were lasers

and angry words. And when abuelo napped

no playing was allowed. The casa 

silent like a big cat waiting in the grass

for the fat rat scurrying into the open.

 

I always admired people who never

talked about their jobs the most.


Christopher Rubio-Goldsmith was born in Merida, Yucatan, and raised in Tucson, Arizona. His poetry has appeared in Fissured Tongue, Amuse-Bouche (Lunch Ticket), the anthology America We Call Your Name and other places too. Kelly, his wife, edits his work, sometimes.

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Mama’s Hair