I feel at home at Taco Bell, as the cuisine echoes the worst of my mom’s cooking: cheese that tastes like beans, beans that taste like rice, rice that tastes like flour.
It’s where I go when I am missing someone, usually near their Jesus’ hour, between the last sip of a lunch hour Pepsi and the first after school Cinnabon Delights clutched and munched in little fingers.
I'll lean in whenever a raven haired Circe at a corner table, resembling Sabrena— that witch who first broke my heart— casts a disdainful glance my way.
They’ll tug at the corners of their bad girl leather jacket, gather their familiar charms, and shoot me a bird as they vanish in the smoke of memory.
And then, on some evenings, customers with my mother’s laugh will walk in and then out, their arms cradling grease-slicked terracotta bags, sacred relics in the fluorescence.
The smell of cheap tacos in brittle shells filled with Hamburger Helper, gummy cheese, old lettuce, canned diced tomatoes- that heavenly mess masquerading as a meal would pull me back to her cocina.
In the haze of the Taco Bell fryers, the grease sings of her failures and resilience. Like her, I would smile through it all—always apologizing yet always trying— in the end, scraping meat off chipped plates
remembering my mother’s taco shells and refusing to wipe away the grease, letting it linger an echo of loves imperfect folds.