The colors of your shirt stick to your skin Swollen, tired, tattered The dirt collecting Under, Over, On
In the stillness of the new moon You became a mother A wife A daughter Through the thickness of the humid air the sweat collected on your brow the nape of your neck A crying child A barking dog Some butter on a scalding skillet
Oh, Marisol! If your hands could speak The scars and lines would serenade the sun and soothe your cousin's swollen cheeks the gold in your teeth would shine each time you smiled and said goodbye
but your chestnut hair is whipped by the wind instead and laced black leather boots tower over you in the haze they grasp your arms as if they are their own and cover you in white to protect themselves
Oh Marisol! it is now late at night but you shine for the love you brought with you across six nations all of them packed and stacked neatly you carry them strapped on your back like the sun kissed streets of Cuenca cultivated, preened, and compressed put into the back pocket
It is in dusk when you lay your head Down on that cold, dry, earth And grasp that plastic bottle to your breast Closed eyes and memories of sunrise 20 miles away from the southwest
America rises still beyond Fences lined with flowers pale As white and rich as all those men
But towers over you of course and in the shadows of the Joshua trees You can depart for home again