She sells 2 sole paltas beside street vendors who whistle at crop-top-clad girls, spewing profanities complete with broken English. She has four girls hungry at home. They dream of science, stars, constellations that spiral and sparr with particles that make us what we are —
interrupted by howling dogs, the 5 AM tamale man, and stray **** crows. Amid dust-clouds of Zona D, the sun arrives over the peak Luis claims once exposed his innocent eyes to an angel: one tale of faith raised on culture come undone presently. Poet Andrea Gibson
writes, “I said to the sun, ‘Tell me about the Big Bang.’ And the sun said, ‘it hurts to become.’” At dusk, Mariel takes a Combi out sixteen stops from Quince, up 302 steps to a turquoise shack and a red rose garden, and plants avocado seeds at her toes. Poco a poco, se anda lejos.