By Casandra Lopez
My words are always
collapsing
upon themselves, they feel too tight
in my mouth. I want a new
language.One with at least
50 words for grief
and 50 words for love, so I can offer
them to the living
who mourn the dead. I want
a language that understands
sister-pain and heart-hurt. So
when I tell you Brother
is my hook of heart, you will see
the needle threading me to
the others, numbered
men, women and children
of our grit spit city.
I want a language to tell you
about 2010's
37th homicide. The unsolved,
all I know about a man,
my city turned to number,
always sparking memory,
back to longer days when:
Ocean is the mouth
of summer. Our shell fingers
drive into sand, searching–we find
tiny silver sand crabs we scoop
and scoop
till we bore and go
in search of tangy seaweed.
We are salted sun. How we brown
to earth. Our warm flesh flowering,
reminding us of our desert and canyon
blood. In this new language our bones say
sun and sea, reminding us of an old
language our mouths have forgotten, but our
marrow remembers.
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