The Poet X

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The Poet X Page 9

by Elizabeth Acevedo

of this panic. I’ll loosen myself from this painful flesh.

  See, a cuero is any skin. A cuero

  is just a covering. A cuero is a loose thing.

  Tied down by no one. Fluttering

  and waving in the wind. Flying. Flying. Gone.

  Mami Says,

  “There be no clean in men’s hands.

  Even when the dirt has been scrubbed

  from beneath nails, when the soap scent

  from them suspends

  in the air—there be sins there.

  Their washed hands know how to make a dishrag

  of your spine, wring your neck.

  Don’t look for pristine handling

  when men use your tears for Pine-Sol;

  they’ll mop the floor with your pride.

  There be no clean there, girl.

  Their fingers were made to scratch dirt,

  to find it in the best of things.

  Make your heart a Brillo pad,

  brittle and steel—don’t be no damn sponge.

  Their fingers don’t know to squeeze nicely.

  Nightly, if you imagine men’s kisses, soft touches, a caress,

  remember Adam was made from clay that stains the hand,

  remember that Eve was easily tempted.”

  Repetition

  Mami’s hard hands

  make me dizzy and nauseous.

  Mami prays and prays

  while my knees bite into grains of rice.

  Mami repeats herself

  while her statue of the Virgin watches.

  The whole house witnesses

  as I pray this steep, steep price.

  Things You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Have Nothing to Do with Repentance:

  I once watched my father peel an orange

  without once removing the knife from the fruit.

  He just turned and turned and turned it like a globe

  being skinned. The orange peel becoming a curl,

  the inside exposed and bleeding. How easily he separated

  everything that protected the fruit and then passed the bowl

  to my mother, dropping that skin to the floor

  while the inside burst between her teeth.

  Another Thing You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Has Nothing to Do with Repentance:

  My mother has never had soft hands.

  Even when I was a child, they were rough

  from pushing wooden mops and scrubbing tiles.

  But when I was little I didn’t mind.

  We would walk down the street

  and I would rub her calluses.

  She would smile and say

  I was her premio for hard work,

  I was her premio for patience.

  And I loved being her reward.

  The golden trophy of her life.

  I just don’t know when I got too big

  for the appointed pedestal.

  The Last Thing You Think While You’re Kneeling on Rice That Has Nothing to Do with Repentance:

  How you will have deep grain-sized indents on your knees.

  How lucky you are your jeans protect the skin from breaking.

  How you will be walking slow to school.

  How kneeling on pews was never as bad as this.

  How neither your father nor brother say anything.

  How you feel cold but blood has rushed to your face.

  How your fists are clenched but they have nothing to hit.

  How the stinging pain shoots up your thighs.

  How you’ve never gritted your teeth this tight.

  How it hurts less if you force yourself still, still, still.

  How pointless these thoughts are. Any of them.

  How kissing should never hurt so much.

  Leaving

  Twin presses a bag

  of frozen mixed vegetables

  against my knees

  and another against my cheek.

  “You’re lucky, you know.

  She’s growing old.

  She didn’t make you kneel very long.”

  And with the stings

  still fresh on my skin

  I’m not in a place to nod.

  But I know it’s true.

  “Xio. Just don’t get in trouble

  until we can leave.

  Soon we can leave for college.”

  I’ve never heard Twin sound so desperate,

  never thought he dreamed of leaving

  just like me.

  I try not to be resentful he skipped a grade

  and will escape sooner.

  I try not to be upset at his soft touch.

  I elbow him away,

  afraid of how my hands

  want to hurt everything around me.

  What Do You Need from Me?

  Is such a simple question.

  But when Caridad texts Twin

  the message to show to me,

  I look at him and hand the phone back.

  I’m not mad that he told her.

  I know they’re both just worried.

  But all I need is to give in to

  what I wouldn’t let myself do in front of Mami:

  I curl into a ball and weep.

  Consequences

  My mother drops the word no

  like a hundred grains of rice.

  I will kneel in these, too.

  No cell phone.

  No lunch money.

  No afternoons off from church.

  No boys.

  No texting.

  No hanging out after school.

  No freedom.

  No time to myself.

  No getting out of confession

  with Father Sean this Sunday.

  Late That Night

  The only person I want

  to talk to is Aman.

  And although Twin offers

  to let me use his phone,

  I don’t know what I’d say.

  That we had a great day,

  and that it all fell apart.

  That my heart hurts more than my knees.

  That we can’t be together anymore.

  That I would take that beating

  again to be with him?

  Maybe, there are no words to say.

  I just want to be held.

  Friday, November 9

  In Front of My Locker

  I’m so out of it the next morning

  as I put my things away in my locker

  that I don’t notice the group of guys

  circling near until one bumps me,

  both his hands palming and squeezing my ass.

  And I can tell by how his boys laugh,

  how he smirks while saying “oops,”

  that this was not an accident.

  I scan the hall.

  Other kids have slowed down.

  Some girls whisper behind their hands.

  The group of boys laugh, begin walking away.

  Out of the corner of my eye I see Aman

  slowing to a standstill. His smile fading.

  For the first time since I can remember I wait.

  I can’t fight today. Everything inside me feels beaten.

  And maybe I won’t have to.

  Aman is here. He’ll do something about it.

  Of course, as a boy who cares about me,

  he’s not going to let someone touch me

  and make me feel so damn small inside.

  Of course, as someone who I’ve talked to

  about how weird it feels to be stared at

  and touched like public property,

  he’ll know how much this bothers me.

  But Aman doesn’t move.

  All the things I needed to tell him about last night,

  all the things that have changed since we last kissed on the train

  evaporate in the heat of my anger.

  I feel my knees throbbing,

  the rice bruises pressing into the fabric of my swe
ats.

  And I think about how Aman is the reason

  I was punished in the first place.

  He’s not going to throw a punch.

  He’s not going to curse or throw a fit.

  He’s not going to do a damn thing.

  Because no one will ever take care of me but me.

  Pushing away from my locker,

  I face the dude who groped me,

  push him hard in the back.

  He stumbles but before he can react

  I look him dead in the eye:

  “If you ever touch me again I’ll put my nails

  through every pimple on your fucking face.”

  I push my locker closed and grill Aman before walking away.

  “That goes for you, too. Thanks for nothing.”

  Part III

  The Voice of One

  Crying in the Wilderness

  Silent World

  All of Friday and the weekend

  the world I’ve lived in

  wears masking tape

  over its mouth.

  I wear invisible

  Beats headphones

  that muffle sound.

  I don’t hear teachers,

  or Father Sean,

  Twin, or Caridad.

  Aman tries to speak to me

  but even in bio

  I pretend my ears are cotton filled.

  I speak to no one.

  The world is almost peaceful

  when you stop trying

  to understand it.

  Sunday, November 11

  Heavy

  After Mass on Sunday,

  under Mami’s knowing eyes, I step to Father Sean.

  He’s kissing babies and talking to old people,

  but he gives me his full attention.

  I ask to meet him for confession.

  And I can’t tell if I imagine it,

  but his eyes almost seem to get soft.

  He glances behind me,

  where Mami is standing.

  Instead of the confessional, he tells me

  to meet him in the rectory,

  the well-lit meeting space behind the church.

  And I don’t know how much truth

  my tongue will stumble through.

  I walk through the side door and

  avoid looking at pictures of the saints.

  I’m always avoiding something

  and it seems as heavy as any cross.

  My Confession

  How do you admit a thing like this?

  You would think I was pregnant

  the way my parents act

  like I let them down.

  And by my parents, I mean Mami.

  Papi mostly huffs around

  telling me I better do what Mami says.

  And Mami huffs around

  saying I better read Proverbs 31 more closely.

  And I just want to tell them,

  it’s NOT THAT DEEP.

  I don’t got an STD, or a baby.

  It was just a tongue. In my mouth.

  So I’m not quite sure what to tell

  Father Sean when I meet him in the rectory.

  Maybe I don’t remember my Bible right,

  but I don’t think this is one of the seven sins.

  He sits across from me and crosses his ankles.

  “Whenever you’re ready we can talk.

  I’m guessing you don’t need anonymity and I thought

  this would be cozier than the confessional. Do you want tea?”

  I look at my clasped hands. Because I can’t look him in the face.

  “I think I committed lust. And disobeyed my parents . . .

  although they never actually said I couldn’t kiss a boy

  on the train, so I’m not sure if that’s the right sin.”

  I wait for Father Sean to speak,

  but he just stares at the picture of the pope above me.

  “Are you actually sorry, Xiomara?”

  I wait a moment. Then I shake my head, no. Say:

  “I’m sorry I got in trouble.

  I’m sorry I have to be here.

  That I have to pretend to you and her

  that I care about confirmation at all.

  But I’m not sorry I kissed a boy.

  I’m only sorry I was caught.

  Or that I had to hide it at all.”

  Father Sean Says,

  “Our God is a forgiving God.

  Even when we do things we shouldn’t

  our God understands the weakness of the flesh.

  But forgiveness is only granted

  if the person is actually remorseful.

  I think this goes much deeper

  than kissing a boy on the train.”

  Prayers

  Father Sean is Jamaican.

  His Spanish has a funky accent

  and when he gives the gospel for the Latino Mass

  half of the words be sounding made up.

  It makes the younger kids laugh;

  it makes our older folks smile.

  His Spanish, when he talks to my mother,

  does neither. His hazel eyes are sure

  and gentle when he looks at Mami

  and tells her:

  “Altagracia, I don’t think Xiomara

  is quite ready to be confirmed.

  I think she has some questions

  we should let her answer first.”

  He explains it’s not what I confessed.

  But several questions I’ve asked

  and comments I’ve made

  make him think I should keep

  coming to classes

  but not take the leap of confirmation this year.

  My mother’s face scrunches tight

  like someone has vacuumed all her joy.

  I avoid her eyes

  but something must flash in them

  because Father Sean raises a hand.

  “Altagracia, please be calm.

  Remember anger is as much a sin

  as any Xiomara may have committed.

  We all need time to come to terms

  with certain things, don’t we?”

  And I don’t know

  if Father Sean just granted me a blessing

  or nailed my coffin shut.

  How I Can Tell

  I can tell when Mami is really angry

  because her Spanish becomes faster than usual.

  The words bumping into one another like go-karts.

  “Mira, muchacha . . . You will not embarrass me in church again.

  From now on, you’re going to fix yourself.

  Do you hear me, Xiomara?

  No te lo voy a decir otra vez.”

  (But I know she will in fact tell me again. And again.)

  “There are going to be some big changes.”

  Before We Walk in the House

  “You cannot turn your back on God.

  I was on my journey to the convent,

  prepared to be his bride,

  when I married your father.

  I think it was punishment.

  God allowed me America

  but shackled me with a man addicted to women.

  It was punishment,

  to withhold children from me for so long

  until I questioned if anyone in this world would ever love me.

  But even business deals are promises.

  And we still married in a church.

  And so I never walked away from him

  although I tried my best to get back

  to my first love.

  And confirmation is the last step I can give you.

  But the child sins just like the parent.

  Because look at you, choosing this over the sacred.

  I don’t know if you’re more like your father

  or more like me.”

  My Heart Is a Hand

  That tightens

  into a fist.

  It is a shrinking thing,


  like a raisin,

  like a too-tight tee,

  like fingers that curl

  but have no other hand

  to hold them

  so they just end up

  biting into themselves.

  Wednesday, November 14

  A Poem Mami Will Never Read

  Mi boca no puede escribir una bandera blanca,

  nunca será un verso de la Biblia.

  Mi boca no puede formarse el lamento

  que tú dices tú y Dios merecen.

  Tú dices que todo esto

  es culpa de mi boca.

  Porque tenía hambre,

  porque era callada.

  pero ¿y la boca tuya?

  Cómo tus labios son grapas

  que me perforan rápido y fuerte.

  Y las palabras que nunca dije

  quedan mejor muertas en mi lengua

  porque solamente hubieran chocado

  contra la puerta cerrada de tu espalda.

  Tu silencio amuebla una casa oscura.

  Pero aun a riesgo de quemarse,

  la mariposa nocturna siempre busca la luz.

  In Translation

  My mouth cannot write you a white flag,

  it will never be a Bible verse.

  My mouth cannot be shaped into the apology

  you say both you and God deserve.

  And you want to make it seem

  it’s my mouth’s entire fault.

  Because it was hungry,

  and silent, but what about your mouth?

  How your lips are staples

  that pierce me quick and hard.

  And the words I never say

  are better left on my tongue

  since they would only have slammed

  against the closed door of your back.

  Your silence furnishes a dark house.

  But even at the risk of burning,

  the moth always seeks the light.

  Heartbreak

  I never meant to hurt anyone.

  I didn’t see how I could

  by stealing kisses

  as I whispered promises into ears

  that I know now weren’t listening.

  I pretend not to see him in the hallway.

  I pretend not to see them at home.

 

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