I think the superscript could read 1619.
I think the superscript could be the current year.
I think history is a linear accumulation.
M.
I think if math is wealth then wealth is history.
I think X marks a continent of loss.
I think the more you multiply the more you have.
I think so much depends on personal pronouns.
D.
I think the inverse of history is heritage.
I think heritage halved is power.
I think power has varied degrees.
I'm still thinking personal pronouns.
A.
I think who you are says a lot.
I think the second person implies two sides.
I think it says less plus less equals less.
I think it says more plus more equals more.
S.
I think deducting anything adds a negative sign.
I think the question equals more than five answers.
I think statistics can't fix quotes or crises.
I think this is problematic.
. . . 'cause his life is warfare.
âMOS DEF AND TALIB KWELI
You know those people who are uncomfortable
having a conversation at a comfortable level?
Like, you ask Tony his thoughts on Kobe
or the LA Lakers. And Tony responds:
Schwarzenegger ruined their state.
Four years in office and more debt than '03?
Come on, man. Fuck California.
Yeah. So Tony's my dad. He's retired
but doesn't know it. He thinks sleep is
death's first cousin. Early a.m.s
my brother and me tiptoe meandering routes
around our house, avoiding his line of sight.
These are the hours he tunes to AM talk.
Reads his paper where the stakes are high.
Two Decembers ago, my brother Brian and me.
We're sharing cognac sips and cigarillos
shooting stars in a powdered driveway
when dad breaks from the Al Sharpton Hour.
Tracks prints to basement floor. He starts in
on precipitation:
What type of grown-ass men
trek lines of snow through a house?
Me and your mama raised you better than that.
He shifts into hyperbole:
When you two start
having kids, I hope you take plenty of movies.
Your mama and me plan to kick backâwatch
the decline of common courtesy.
Then Brian
makes a wrong move. Smiles. Says snow was
trailed in a square. Technically a half rhombus.
Pops leaves us. Leaves the earth:
Oh, so you
wanna joke about geometry? I hear scientists
developed a system for tracing racist thoughts.
Can you use your math on that?
Someone should make a drug to kill every last
bigot in the world. They should pump that shit
through the faucets.
Drunken laughs march Dad out.
In what world does he live? Michigan bigots
own bunkers. Unregistered land. And if I spent
one summer as a survey worker, if I phoned a woman
named Shanquita and assumed she lived in a hood,
is that intra-racist? Is it double-back racist to assume
you assume she was black? To assume you are not?
Would I be exempt from the ax? Could a black poet
fail the test? Let's say yes. Let's call my F a defect
of private schooling and exclusive subdivisions.
Let's call my death another gulp in the throat
of history's tireless typhoon, spinning backward.
I caught it like a shard of glass catches a beam.
How a stranger's smile can level a man. Can light
his sunken chest. Swell a new breath. In other words
I was the shard who glinted your eyes. In that light
blue halter, fifth hour, you were the poetry
I normally ignored. Your ballpoint's clean marks. Light
blue, light touch against my windbag essays. That made
you especially stunning. Made you lightening
I had to harness, hand in hand, beneath a desk. Or
in an unattended dark room. Tenderly, red light
washing over us. As I did. Abruptlyâtelling
you it takes the right type of girl to make a black-white
relationship work. You loved how Common rapped “The Light.”
I listened to him more than you. His sly antiâwhite
woman rhymes never touched me. But you. You filtered through
a magnifying glass. Warmed the cherry orchard, white
with frost. Your light sweetened my pit. You are lightning
crashed through his pulpit into this poem. Beaming. Yes, white.
A gleaming ax hacked through what we were growing into.
I was the ax. You were two syllables too many. White
space in a wheeling sonnet. A corner I couldn't turn
in nine lines. But now I am mourning. Thanks to you, first light.
Do I love you? Do I lust for you?
Am I a sinner because I do the two?
âA TRIBE CALLED QUEST
Because you introduced me to Wu-Tang
kung fu flicks,
Five Fingers of Death
&
36 Chambers
over quarter candy & sweet peach Faygo
pop on a playground bench.
Because you held my hand
as I cranked the boom box volume knob.
Because you lived next door to my boy B.
Because he slept through twelfth grade
to the tape-recorded husk of your voice.
Because he never graduated
he stayed home & mostly kicked it
with a hustler, turned third-shift grinder.
His name was D. He lived by you too.
B. got fed, turned out cool & normal.
Because I nodded to your chest's thump
under a rocket's trail of smoke
strong enough to trace every porch
couch, box spring & classroom in Kzoo.
Your cherry gloss lingered around
each Olde E bottle I downed.
Because I studied you in college.
I want you to sound bad.
Because you are mine.
Because I refuse to share
let's say you're an overwhelming
total body high.
Because your mouth
is the nectar & squish of a peach.
Because your lips are the color
of a flowering quince.
You ghost-rode your banana-seat
bike through my yard. Miss Bonita,
I caught your bug & couldn't kick it.
So wrap your cultured-up skull around this. I woke
to a red cross stenciled onto mismatched logs
and “The Entertainer” weeping from a black baby
grandâeach note a hound dog's droopy ear. Hear
me when I say, I was lost. Stranded at a teen arts camp
so north in the UP I was hearing southern tongues.
Some flanneled blond man trailed a finger in the air.
Bumped cha head perdy good there. Reckon ya
twisted that ankle on this.
He aimed at my foot
with the bottom of a snapper's lacquered shellâ
hazy compact, reflecting a dark, faceless me.
Am I
in heaven?
I asked. He cackled at that; shaking his
bronze leather face at the wall,
No, no. 'Least not like him.
My vision steadied on a hunchback boy in a yellowed white
tee as I rose from the cot. His erratic, thunderous sniffling
spooked words in my throat:
Is he going to be, all right?
âOh yeah. That there's just my little boy, Tim. Been
carryin' on like that since a babe. Just a-cryin' and playin'
piano that way. Go'on over and say hello.
I joined the boy of five or six at the small black bench
and forced a nervous smile. Timmy's glassy blue eyes
kept time with a wooden metronome. His pupils shrank
and grew. Shrank and grew; dilating on each upbeat.
What if I said he wrapped my hands around his
wrist? Would you think me stoned as Snoop Dogg
at a slain rapper's wake if I told you he stared? That
he wept and played? You think I'm talking shit.
His pupil's penny-size screen flashed small
looped horrors: the snapper's shriveled head
lopped off with a Boy Scout knife; a muscled teen
pissing on an old, vagrant man, drooling snuff
on courthouse steps; the night clerk's nose stud
nailed to a bloody boot heel. You better believe
I bounced; hopped toward an exit. But Timmy
kept on playing, drilling notes into me
like a downpour thumping a well.
True story. The boy never left that room.
Go ahead. You can ask me how I know.
The edge I'm at is eleven feet high and safer than
the dirt lot below, where shattered glass doubles
as ground. Three rusted-out pickup trucks
have been outfitted with yellow steel boots
and stuffed with flames, igniting steady gusts
of ammoniaâbodily and actualâa smell
inextricably related to the tear ducts that also
combusted here, and why I'm standing atop
a single-wide eyeing punched-in mobile home
darkness.     I'm thinking
about Grandmaster Flash. “The Message”:
an open row of a freshly set chessboard, bleak
beneath a pink, umbrella-donned table. And
the two rats, fat as badgers, schlepping around
a dog's charred carcass is the move I will make
to hurt you. It's 3 a.m. I just pulled off a Nowhere,
Indiana road to watch a trailer park smoke. A fist
of ash like nail polish scorched with salt blasts
me to my knees. Everything disintegrates
from this angle. Bit by bit. Like blacktop
sweating off layers in sun. Like police tape
singed with flame. From this point of view
soot cloaks stars. Even a white, grinning moon
finds its cheekbones eliminated here. I'm talking
about real lives and white rock rubble. Eyelids,
pocked with reddening cinder. Noses, eroded
and raw. I'm wondering if a face on fire
looks the same in any city. In any hue.
A phone rings an answering machine awake.
The trailing silence hearkens a boarded-up
project building. And in one great big empty
alleyway after another, people are boxed in
or burning up. Vanishing into thin air. Here
I am again, sketch pad in hand, glued to this spot
watching smoke stifle everythingâwhite
and black chess pieces melting in slow mo.
& the mother cops a stiff
pull from the glass bong.
& murky water gurgling
in the bulb-like chamber
is barely heard but indistinctly
audible over Roy Ayers's
interstellar vibe. & smoke clouds
the bong's fat green neck
& glides down the woman's throat
into her belly