For Michele Serros (1966- 2015)
This could have been an ode
to your fur coat, to your gold shoes
stuck in the mud outside Salinas,
to tilled acres, to grandmothers
that live in the house, to poets
reading poems at Lollapalooza,
to cassettes and cassette tape
iphone cases, to water tower
selfies in strange front yards,
to wide laced hats, comadre-
only tea times, vegan tamales,
50 year old quinceñeras and
East LA punk bands named
Edward James Olmos.
Begging your pardon, Doña,
your Joven should be writing
an ode to the bullhorn
you used at the gallery
en La Mision, San Pancho.
I should be writing an ode
to La Mickey, La Giggles, and
La Chicana Falsa’s whispers
extinguishing sound from lips,
an ode to whispers fishing laughs
from bellies, whispers draining
eyes of their tears, whispers
lifting asses from seats,
some loud ass street dude
making a mess in aisle five,
fierce incantatory whispers
pulling hands into other hands
clap clap clapclap clapping,
more tears, an ode to tears,
an ode to laughter, an ode
to Tias who said you’d never
become a writer, nunca.
And that moon? That moon
over 24th street just as loud
as gold shoes in the mud,
loud as wide laced hats,
loud as a fake fur coat,
loud as candle flames
on a dark night in Berkeley.
Dark like the night you left.
An ode to the darkness
for making us see
that moon, those candles,
an ode to Celia’s prayer,
to Ester’s bracelets lifted
in the air, an ode to
holding hands
in bedroom, in living room,
down steps, floating,
more tears, floating
over neighbor’s
tossed white petals,
that candlelight again,
that moon again, floating
into the big limousine.
Do you remember, Doña?
Do you remember how
the moon came to see
you off? Down Ashby,
Adeline, Broadway
to Oxnard,
to Oxnard.
I should be writing
an ode to the sea
in Oxnard,
in Oxnard.
And I know you left us
on a skateboard
sneaker kicked, pushed
over fresh streets
swerving
under bent knees
around the cliffs
on the 101,
your hand,
your fingers
waving in the breeze
to the waves,
to the sand
to the sun,
to the fields,
and all those
pretty goddamned
things.
I should be writing
an ode to your fingers.
Don’t leave, Doña.
Your fingers.
You're still
kicking,
You're still
pushing, gliding.
Your fingers
gently brush
the repeating
yellow lines
in the road: gone.
From Shadowboxing: Poems & Impersonations (Omnidawn, 2017) by Joseph Rios. Copyright © 2017 Joseph Rios. Reprinted by permission of the author.