Read When My Brother Was an Aztec Online
Authors: Natalie Diaz
Tonight I am riddled by this thick skull
this white bowling ball zipped in the sad-sack carrying case of my face,
this overwound bone jack-in-the-box,
this Orlando's zero, Oaxacan offering:
cabeza locada, calavera azucarada, clavo jodido, cenote
of Mnemosyne,
this sticky-sweet guilt hive,
piedra blanca del rio oscuro,
this small-town medical mania dispensary, prescribed cranium pill,
this electric blue tom-tom drum ticking like an Acme bomb, hypnotized explosive device, pensive general, scalp-strapped warrior, soldier with a loaded God complex,
this Hotchkiss-obliterated headdress, Gatling-lit labyrinth,
this memory grenade, death epithet, death epitaph, mound of
momento mori,
this twenty-two-part talisman wearing a skirt of breasts, giant ball of
masa,
this god patella in the long leg of my torso, zoo of canines and Blake's tygers,
this red-skinned apple, lamp illuminated by teeth, gang of grin, spitwad of scheme,
this jawbone of an ass, smiling sliver of smite, David's rock striking the Goliath of my body,
this Library of Babel, homegrown Golgotha, nostalgia menagerie, melon festival,
this language mausoleum:
chuksanych iraavtahanm, 'avi kwa'anyay, sumach nyamasav,
this hidden glacier hungry for a taste of titanic flesh,
this pleasure altar, French-kiss sweatshop, abacus of one-night stands, hippocampus whorehouse, oubliette of regret,
this church of tongue, chapel of vengeance, cathedral of thought, bone dome of despair,
plaza del toro y pensamientos,
this museum of tribal dentistry, commodity cranium cupboard, petrified dream catcher,
this sun-ruined basketball I haulârotted gray along the seamsâperpetual missed shot,
this insomnia podium, little bowl in a big fish, brain amphitheater, girl in the moon,
this 3 a.m. war bell,
duende
vision prison,
this single-scoop vanilla head rush, thunder head, fastball, lightning rod,
this mad scientist in a white lab helmet, ghost of Smoking Mirror,
this coyote beacon, calcium corral of pale perlino ponies,
this desert seed I am root to, night-blooming cereus, gourd gone rattle,
this Halloween crown, hat rack, worry contraption, Rimbaud's drunken boat, blazing chandelier,
casa de relámpago,
this coliseum
venatio
: Borges's other tiger licking the empty shell of Lorca's white
tortuga,
this underdressed godhead, forever-hatching egg, this mug again and again at my lips,
and all this because tonight I imagined you sleeping with her
the way we once sleptâas intimate as a jaw, maxilla and mandible hot,
in the skinâin love, our heads almost touching.
While she sleeps, I paint
Valencia oranges across her skin,
seven times the color orange,
a bright tree glittering the limestone grotto of her clavicleâ
heaving bonfires pulsing each pale limb
like Nero's condemned heretics sparking along Via Appia.
A small stream of Prussian blue I've trickled
down her bicep. A fat red nasturtium
eddies her inner elbow.
Against her swollen palms,
I've brushed glowing halves of avocados
lamping like bell-hipped women in ecstasy.
A wounded Saint Teresa sketched to each breast.
Her navel is a charcoal bowl of figs,
all stem thick with sour milk and gowned
in taffeta the color of bruises.
This to offer up with our flophouse prayersâ
God created us with absence
in our hands, but we will not return that way.
Not now, when we are both so capable of growing full
on banquets embroidered by Lorca's gypsy nun.
She sleeps, gone to the needle's gentle rocking,
and I lean out the window, a Horus
drunk on my own scent
and midnight's slow drip of stars.
She has always been more orchard than loved,
I, more bite than mouth.
So much is empty in this hourâ
the spoon, still warm, lost in the sheets,
the candle's yellow-white thorn of flame,
a vanishing ribbon of jade smoke,
and night, open as autumn's unfilled basket
as the locusts feast the field.
with a line from Rimbaud
To be next to you again,
to feel the knob of your pelvic bone,
the door of your hip opening
to a room of light
where a fuchsia blouse hangs
in the closet of a conch shell,
the silhouette of a single red-mouthed bell;
to shut my eyes one more night
on the delta of shadows
between your shoulder bladesâ
mysterious wings tethered inside
the pale cage of your bodyârun through
by Lorca's horn of moonlight,
strange unicorn loose along the dim streets
separating our skins;
to be still again knowing
the bow of your spine, the arc of your torsoâ
a widening road to an alabaster mountain,
a secret path to a cliff overlooking a sea
salt-heavy and laced in foam, a caravel
crushing the swells, parting each
like blue-skirted thighsâlay before me,
another New World shore the gods
have chained me to;
to have you a last time, at last, a touch away,
but then, to not reach out
because my hands are dressed in scarves of smoke;
to lie silent at your side,
an ember more brilliant with each yellow breath,
glowing and dying and dying again,
dreaming a mesquite forest I once stripped to fire
before the sky went ash, undid its dark ribbons,
and bent to the ground, grief-ruined,
as I watch you from the windowâ
in this city, the city of you, where I am a beggarâ
the Dawns are heartbreaking.
My lover doesn't realize that I've contemplated this scenario,
fingered it like the smooth inner iridescence of a nautilus shell
in the shadow-long waters of many 2 a.m.sâdrunk on the brine
of shoulder blades, those pale horns of shore I am wrecked upon,
my mind treading the wine-dark waves of luxuria's tempestsâ
as a matter of preparedness, and because I do not sleep for fear
of such things or even other thingsâI've read that the ocean
is a large pot of Apocalypse soup soon to boil over with our sinsâ
but a thing is a thing, especially if it's a 420-million-year-old beast,
especially if you have wronged so many as I. Beauty, it is simple,
more simple than a beloved can imagine: I wouldn't fight, not kick,
flail, not carry on like one driven mad by the black neoprene wetsuit
of death, not like sad-mouthed, despair-eyed albacore or blubbery
pinnipeds, wouldn't rage the city's flickering streets of ampullae
of Lorenzini, nor slug my ferocious, streamlined lover's titanium
white nose, that bull's-eye of cartilage, no, I wouldn't prolong it.
Instead, I'd place my head onto that dark altar of jaws, prostrated
pilgrim at Melville's glittering gates, climb into that mysterious
window starred with teethâthe one lit room in the charnel house.
I, at once mariner, at once pirate, would navigate my want by those
throbbing constellations. I'd wear those jaws like a toothy cilice,
slip into the glitzy red gown of penance, and it would be no different
from what I do each dayâvoyaging the salt-sharp sea of your body,
sometimes mooring the ports or sighting the sextant, then mending
the purple sails and hoisting the masts before being bound to them.
Be-loved,
is
loved, what you cannot know is I am overboard for this
metamorphosis, ready to be raptured to that mouth, reduced to a swell
of wet clothes, as you roll back your eyes and drag me into the fathoms.
Tonight, after reading Lorca's
Cante jondo,
I'm ready, dressed
for the procession, for Jesus's wounds, the mob's red dresses.
The Gitana's savage hair charges the night,
nocturno de guerra,
battle-
field of a thousand and one bulls. Their weapons: violent red dresses.
Santa Teresa,
torera,
sacrificed her body to the pale horns. A First
Confession: the split fruit made my thighs buck under my red dress.
What hips!
Péndulos.
And breasts! Clocks adorning the dim hall-
ways of kissâthere is chiming and hands beneath the red dress.
Men crouch, crotches tremulous in the creaking ribcage of a horse.
Who hasn't beat at the gates of Troy for a taste of Helen's red dress?
Cherries dazzle the branches, merciless vermilion gods.
My tongue's a heretic, prostrated. My heart's a red dress.
El colibrà atormentado
thrummed honeysuckle's orange guitar to inferno.
Azaleas wept jealously, bruised knees mourning September's red dresses.
The soldiers' guns were blue tapers. An olive tree, a requiem. Silver
flies riddled the sky. Three men and a poet slept hard in red dresses.
Yesterday's pains scar over. The body is canvasâPicasso's
Guernica:
open palms, questions, the lamp's faded red dress.
We are black poplars at the foot of Sacromonte. They mistake
salt for
azúcar,
these ants devouring us like magic red dresses.
India
, give in to the shells chafing your shadowy thighs and belly
while
LucÃa MartÃnez
builds your evening pyre, your final red dress.
You would have, too.
From that distance the shivering city
fit in the palm of her hand
like she owned it.
She could've blown the whole thingâ
markets, dance halls, hookah barsâ
sent the city and its hundred harems
tumbling across the desert
like a kiss. She had to look back.
When she did she saw
pigeons glinting like debris above
ruined rooftops. Towers swaying.
Women in broken skirts
strewn along burned-out streets
like busted red bells.
The noise was something elseâ
dogs wept, roosters howled, children
and guitars popped like kernels of corn
feeding the twisting blaze.
She wondered had she unplugged
the coffeepot? The iron?
Was the oven off?
Her husband uttered,
Keep going.
Whispered,
Stay the course,
or
Baby, forget about it.
She couldn't.
Now a bursting garden of fire
the city bloomed to flame after flame
like hot fruit in a persimmon orchard.
Someone thirsty asked for water.
Someone scared asked to pray.
Her daughters or the crooked-legged angel,
maybe. Dark thighs of smoke opened
to the sky. She meant to look
away, but the sting in her eyes,
the taste devouring her tongue,
and the neighbors begging her name.
I dipped my fingers in the candle wax at churchâ
white votives shivered in red glass
at the foot of la Virgen's gownâ
glowing green-gold.
The fever was fastâ
my body ablaze,
I pulled back.
Pale silk curved on each fingertipâ
peeling it away was like small gasps.
The candles flickeredâ
open mouths begging.
Heretics banged at the double door.
Charismatics paraded the aisles,
twirling tapers, flinging Sunday hats.
The Rapture came and went, left
me, the choir's bright robes,
collection baskets like broken tambourinesâ
What poverty, to never know,
to never slide over the lip of a candle
toward flameâraving to touch
her bare brown toes.
There are certain words
you can't say in airportsâ
words that mean bomb, blow up, jihad,
hijack, terrorist, terrorism, terrorize,
terrific fucking terror.
And words like
orange
â
small citrus grenades,
laced with steel seeds, rinds lined
with anthrax.
Security cameras scan and scrutinize
Californians. Floridians
are profiled, picked for full-body
fondlingsâeveryone knows Florida
is the Axis of Oranges.
Loudspeakers announce:
All passengers' navels
must be covered or checked in baggage.
Congress is considering mandatory
navelectomies.
Orange Alert paranoia eats away
at the nation like a very hungry caterpillar.
The Mexicans, known agents of oranges,
are scaredâtaking to the streets, picketing,
fighting for
naranjas
as if they were their own
corazones.
They don't understandâ
We don't fly,
they say.
If we want to travel
we borrow TÃa Silvi's minivan.
Pamphlets flutter from the sky
telling how to tell
if someone's a terrorist: They tell jokes
with punch lines like:
Orange you glad I didn't say banana?
Women with B cups, men with certain-
sized crotches, even those with
man-boobs, are squeezed, bobbled in search
of forbidden fruitsâquestioned
about stowed-away pomelos, tangelos,
sun-kissed improvised explosive devices,
quarters of tart dynamite.
Orchards are napalmed.
Homeland Security says,
Convert them all
to parking lots. Go, men! Go!
We're out for blood oranges.
Orange Aide to Third World fruit stands
was canceled.
The U.N. expunged
the Oranges for Oil campaign.
It doesn't stop thereâ
patriot posses mow down highway cones,
the DOT revolted and wrecked their fleets
of clementine-colored trucks,
school crossing guards are mauled in their tangy vestsâ
beaten with Walk signs
by packs of anti-mandarin kindergarteners.
O.J. Simpson's in jail.
Tropicana sold out to V8.
Orange County is a mere smudge
in the West Coast sky.
Halloween was bannedâ
Jehovah's Witnesses shake their heads
saying,
We told you so.
In the haze of this early winter,
blue flames engulf the cities.
Waitâwhat's that you say?
We've been bumped to red alert?
But that's like apples and oranges.