I do not know why you moved to this side long ago, before your city became a **** zone maybe you knew something I did not you knew many things I did not, which I discovered when you politely corrected my grammar though it was my native tongue, and one you learned reading our newspapers, watching our television listening, more carefully than most, to what the gringos said you told me tales of the arena, usually after dinner, on your back porch when the shadow of the mountain covered our houses like a quiet blanket, blocking out the blistering heat of the desert day you would offer me a soda, always before my questions began your civility was strange to me at first, the adults in my family barked and cackled your words rolled out like sweet liquid and left me wanting more I never asked why you had no woman, you were as handsome as any man I knew later, years later, years of name calling later I guess I understood, maybe that was why you left your home though the blind blood of bigotry ran freely on both sides of the Rio Grande and I knew you to be courageous for when you told me the stories, as the desert sky became violet and cool, and the few cicadas began their song, you boasted not of your dangerous dance in the packed dirt of the ring, but of the art it took to silence the beast the lost look in its red *** eyes and the silent sadness you felt as the crowd cheered another beautiful death