Ay, florecitas clouds of white frozen in sugary divine, little flowers of my soul, taste of sweet desire of little boys in San Juan, Moroves, Ponce, exiles in Miami and the Bronx tasting the beauty of their mother’s youth—
knowing love by the rattling of small blooms in the big tin, the maternal hand scooping pastels of confection perfection, passions hard creamy diffusion dusting her, making her a florecita of love—
until florecitas became the way they interpreted the sky— there a lavender snail, an erupting volcano, a devouring whirlpool, a burst of flame a feeding octopus—
until all became the florecitas of their beloveds form: her lips a strawberry florecita splitting apart to his first hesitant probing, her ******* a pink florecita waiting for his sweet consumption, her *** a light brown florecita gently swirling open to his tongue’s taste, *** a fleshy little flower to be split in his sweet embrace, all of her earthy and **** as a Neruda sonnet—
until all that is left for themselves, for my self, is the fading scents of all the florecitas never tasted.