We chose Ixtapa for our honeymoon because it was not yet commercialized, as so many other places in Mexico had become. We spent a lot of time in Zihuatanejo; We burned bay leaves in static pots of delicacy, ignoring the fruit flies as we drank mezcal. You swallowed the maguey worm, and hallucinated its life as a moth before it's capture from the agave. It hit you like the Gulf that May of 1986; beautifully and cold. You looked like a watercolor entangled in the rope hammock. Wide-mouthed and muscular, in the reflection of my sterling cuff bracelet. While I examined my jewelry, our feet were buried in the sand by the dust we swallowed during our upbringing. Bred and raised for fighting, we made love like a bull kissing capote; Taunting one another in a masculine ring, performing in foreign terrain. You were so delicate with your hands around my throat. You helped me forget by pulling apart the wings of my droning youth that week.