It is a deep, bruised, purple that starts just below her left eye and runs like a brushstroke, to the right and comes clear across the lower mandible, stopping after her right ear is swallowed by the color of fresh plums.
The iPod or smartphone rides in the pocket of her pink sweatshirt.
It matters little what songs reside therein; those jams are pure armor.
The sun is in her warrior’s eyes, she squints and the muscles in her jaw flex.
She’s spotted me, ambling in her direction.
We share a brief glance.
Immediately, I can see that I’m both a kindred and an interloper.
(I start. I stop myself. I say nothing.)
She continues with the thousand yards, the long knives, the silver-bullet eyes.
I’d lay real money that her DNA is angry.
She’s an Incan or an Aztec warrior,
and she wears her unwelcome birthright, her birthmark, her war paint, her war pain because she has to.