it was never so much a question I heard as much as one i thought, why's my daddy got blue eyes?
i used to peel this picture out of the floral decopauge box a sepia toned senior photo of him in a varsity jacket a wide spanish grin and my full lips, leonard scrawled on the back, and why's your daddy got blue eyes?
I have always felt alone in this body, a bit of my mother and none of a father, have always hated this brown this skin filled with shade, in the shadow of girls with lean limbs and long hair the color of satin flower, viridian eyes that smile without tryin' and long slender fingers that'd be good for playin' with children and kissing--
i have never seen myself as anything else than muddy water always heavy, full of sand, steaming earth in the grasslands, dense and bitter like orange rinds too round, too full, bubbling with all a manner of pith and marrow quick down in the mire fixed into the silt
I have reached for the men like the one in the photo, dark and ethnic, pleading for affirmation, that there is beauty in brown, in dusk, that I do not have to be Rotomairewhenua clear and effortless that I can easily be fresh and still full of depth and darker hues.
why has my daddy got blue eyes, I wonder?
Rotomairewhenua is the clearest lake in the world. It's in New Zealand.