Angel & Hannah

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Angel & Hannah Page 7

by Ishle Yi Park


  so much.

  Didn’t know I loved the peach parts

  of sky, like soft sighs in the

  morning air.

  Or the smell of roasted peanuts,

  how it gets caught in the back of

  my throat.

  Didn’t know I loved

  windows giving back a

  mirror when lit

  with more sky, more sky

  in every eye. I didn’t know

  I loved trees, all five of them

  on this block, waving

  leaves

  like greenfingers.

  I remember hiding

  under one’s shade while

  papi stuffed a brown

  bundle down my jeans &

  kissed me on the forehead before

  I ran to make his deliveries.

  I didn’t know I loved the

  wind, how cool it feels against

  my skin, pushing me when I run,

  always running. I

  didn’t know I loved taxis.

  God bless this girl, her easy

  twenties. I didn’t know I loved

  my own room,

  Mickey Mouse frames,

  Puerto Rico flag, my

  shirts, towels, torn, but mine.

  Didn’t know I loved her

  feet, toes curling climbing me as

  if I were a tree. Didn’t know I loved

  her hands, so small, we touch

  to make a prayer.

  My palms swallow hers,

  tiny, beautiful hands

  how soft, they touch

  the sides of my face,

  my temples, my twin peaks, my eyelids,

  as if my face is a

  loved thing. I close

  my eyes so she

  won’t see ~

  she kisses

  my eyelids, undoes

  each shirt button like a wish

  and I let go, let her

  keep opening,

  undressing,

  undoing

  me

  Until the day breaks

  and the shadows flee,

  turn, my beloved,

  and be like a gazelle

  or like a young stag

  on the rugged hills.

  ~ Song of Songs

  IV.

  Invierno

  Winter

  “Turn your eyes from me, they overwhelm me,” lover,

  you, who once drank from my heart’s cup of water,

  we’re both parched now. Sere & spent.

  Tired trees bent, God, how fast the years went

  like a sad movie you rewind again &

  again to make sense of the chaos & the tragic end…

  But unlike the trusty Romeo & Juliet,

  our heroes don’t commit suicide or surrender just yet

  (though Hannah cries over her barren

  insides and her fallen Angel, she still tries

  to remember the words of Nina Simone’s

  man-cry — “I gotta lotta livin’ to do before I die —

  but you just do what you gotta do, my wild sweet

  love…” for Self, for Life, for Ancestors above — )

  Dear Audience, the sad truth is: Time passes

  too fast but You, yes, You — Live and Love to the last.

  Warm

  Late November, they wait for the J train

  on the swaying platform. Iron

  poles shiver and stars glint like mica.

  Angel’s boot cracks a vein into a sheet of iced rain.

  He shoulders a sharp-toothed wind

  while coats shuffle into Al’s Liquor

  Shop, a stray pit barks, and his mother

  lies limp in a sickbed in Bushwick.

  I’m cold, Hannah says. Angel bends down,

  blows breath into her palms. He kneads her fingers

  and warms them in his cave-mouth.

  God, so gentle, she thinks,

  how dark, how deep his eyes.

  Snow falls like white stars into his curls.

  Crooked

  After she bails Angel out, Hannah finds out he’s not home free.

  Cops, they try to get him to give up the killer’s name,

  but he’s no snitch. So they planted two bags of coke on me, ma

  he says — and they’re threatening to put me away,

  to lock me up in rehab, for not giving up my tío’s name.

  He had scooped up the bullets to get rid of evidence

  and got stuck with a wack deal — snitch on familia

  and risk a bullet from Blaze in revenge, or cop a plea

  & plead guilty to some shit he didn’t do.

  Really, how can a street kid prove

  NYPD cop corruption? Hannah fumes.

  She drops thousands of dollars, every penny made

  from her new paralegal job, on his criminal case,

  hires a balding lawyer who slides his hand

  down her thigh after one lunch meeting & says,

  Why are you blowing all your money on this thug anyway?

  Come, have dinner on me. My wife is fat. I’m lonely.

  Disgusted, she leaves & sobs quietly on the 7 train

  home, feeling far from grown & completely alone.

  Heat

  Tonight, with Bella’s busted tv spewing sick light

  over her bed full of kids,

  Hannah wants to rip open any face, spill

  outside, tear the iron gate off, take flight —

  take the kids and run. Or just run.

  To Aibonito. Jejudo. Hell. Heaven.

  Sitting there, watching sweet Maria dart, cackle, sniff

  white lines above the toilet, she knows. She’s not Soldier enough,

  not Nun enough, not Flint or Dove enough for a lifetime of

  poverty. She knows her skin will fleck off like lead paint,

  she’ll burn, tender-fleshed, the young ones; she’s like the unassuming

  heater pole in the corner, all saint-

  like, innocent, but inside, seething — deadly.

  She shoves open the bathroom window, lets out steam.

  Lions

  She’s astounded that he can get coke planted on him,

  be arrested and picked up while on his rollerblades

  on his way to Central Park ~ how cops can be

  so racist & corrupt, but it’s no surprise to him.

  He sighs. She pounds her fists on pillows as she practices tae kwon do.

  That night, Hannah dreams that Angel is a golden~maned lion,

  in a sparse valley with sunglassed hunters in squad cars. The valley

  is full of starving, lithe, regal lions the color of midnight, ocean, fire, gold.

  And the hunters are armed with rifles,

  and packs of white baggies that they plant on the hunted lions’ pelts,

  saying, This one was wild, Sarge, on drugs. Run, she tells him, run!

  She’s a voice in da wind. Through a haze,

  she sees zoos ~ filled with lions, who turn into snarling inmates.

  She sees how captivity makes

  regal souls calm, trapped souls crazed.

  Run, she says, run, young lions!, as she stirs & wakes.

  Moonlight

  Even with thick-soled Timbs, Angel treads slow over Jerome’s

  black ice, careful not to twist his an
kle on his way home to Alma,

  plate of arroz con pollo balanced on his palm. But three hooded men bump him

  in their hustle to Highland Park. Chicken meat slips off bone;

  rice & beans scatter like orange vomit into snow.

  Angel’s alone, fuming. He rubs open the box cutter in his pocket,

  thin breaths coming hard, fast. They eye him;

  loom like one huge shadow on concrete.

  A three-headed demon. What? You got beef?

  The fat one sneers —

  moonlight fills the gash in his

  boar-neck. Shorty grips the muzzle of a handgun.

  Angel backs off, stunned.

  Is it moonlight in his eyes, or tears?

  Shine (Angel)

  she’s my shine…

  in my dreams she’s always walking away, into the arms

  of somebody richer, whiter, smarter, better.

  but I can’t let her —

  she’s mine.

  with her, I can let go of all this

  shit — uncurl my hand from a fist

  to a hand that moves quiet as a whisper.

  when I lie down with

  her at night under

  sheets, it’s my safest place — I lay down all

  guns — I swear

  there’s nowhere else I want to be.

  just here.

  streetlight blue on her black hair.

  nothing like her, anywhere.

  Hart Street

  Angel loves this hushed pocket of night,

  after his boys drift into sea,

  after customers sniff and shuffle away

  with a fistful of his two-bit white magic,

  when window lights switch off one by one

  like blown-out candles or stars,

  when he’s alone on the corner of Hart,

  under Jaquelina’s Christmas bulbs

  half-golden in dusky hues,

  air cool against his eyelids, he walks in half-

  circles, does a two-step, sings dancehall reggae in

  a high falsetto alone to his skinny self…

  he lights a Newport, stares down the street —

  it burns a blue line into infinity.

  Chesa

  Outside, a bloodorange moon

  spills grief over Bushwick’s battered brownstones.

  Same moon Hannah’s mother studies on her porch

  before unscrewing jars, preparing meat, & rosewood plates for an early morning chesa ~

  seaweed soup, pared apples, rice, incense for ancestors to inhale.

  On this ripe harvest night, her father buttons up the Brooks Brothers suit

  (he has no occasion to wear it except for funerals), to bow three times in the gray

  dawn, circle smoke with a silver cup of water, inviting ancestors to drink.

  She wonders now, staring at a cold, moonlit city, Would they claim me as

  their own? Or am I completely alone? Where will I go when it’s my time to go?

  To a blue graceland in the sky? Will I fly home to my uma’s land?

  Will they greet me when I arrive?

  She feels she could die or disappear, and no one

  would notice, except the moon, a bloodshot yellow eye.

  Cuban Link

  When his mother dies, Angel clings to Hannah like seaweed,

  even pulls her in the death-limo with his closest family.

  He pawns his prized Cuban link necklace on Wanda’s staircase

  to lace Hannah’s wrist with a ruby bracelet.

  She takes off work for two weeks, sleeps

  at his cousin Sady’s. He collapses in Hannah’s lap

  in the back of the Q16 bus. One night in November,

  letting guards down like cheap slips, she asks

  him how many times he’s cheated. They’re sixteen.

  His lips set in a grim line, he says,

  Yo, don’t ask that question.

  She leaves. He chases her barefoot and shirtless

  down Jamaica Avenue. She throws off his bracelet:

  it stays lost in a gutter, a soft red glint.

  Water (Hannah)

  (hold me, please)

  We’re down to the marrow.

  I kneel in the narrow

  tub in front of Angel;

  he lays limp — a broken

  toy soldier, thin arms

  battered by hot,

  slashing water, down his stomach

  in rivulets. I don’t know

  how it feels to lose a mother,

  anyone so close to kin.

  All I know…is how to slow

  this fall of water,

  open my arms. Let him in.

  Funeral Home

  Why Hannah loves Angel is never more clear:

  Flaco, Alma’s last husband,

  who stole Angel’s Pepe jeans & new Sony camera

  last time he was home, who left opened beers

  piss-rank in the sink, who left Angel’s mother a baby with HIV,

  now lurks outside of Saint Bartholomew’s funeral home, lupine,

  ghost-eyed under lamplight. A crowd of home-

  boys and homegirls from Hart flock close to see

  Angel lose it — fists, blood, a midnight brawl.

  The air is knife-thick. She can hardly catch her breath.

  Angel, stock-still, walks towards him slow.

  Stops. His lips twist.

  He lets loose a cry. Hugs Flaco tight.

  They sob into each other’s thick wool coats.

  Rain

  He’s standing in the rain, she’s crying by her door.

  Early December. Japanese maple leaves stain the

  wet gravel red. A sharp pain

  cleaves her rib cage like a switchblade. The cheap floor

  of her apartment is soaked. God, no more

  mornings listening to the express trains

  hurtle by, watching amber light wane

  in seawaves on his back. A cheap whore

  in a Mets T-shirt, she imagines herself through

  his eyes. But what does she know?

  He’s soaked to bone; his collarbones store

  pools of rain. He tries to sear a true

  memory of her into him — Indigo. Broken. Aglow.

  He’s standing in the rain. She’s crying by her door.

  Angel’s Rehab Suitcase

  Guess jeans,

  two Polo sweaters,

  Hannah’s folded letter,

  Bic shaving cream,

  five pairs of white socks,

  Fruit of the Loom long johns,

  black velour tracksuit by Sean John,

  beeswax for his new dreadlocks,

  five plain white tees,

  two do-rags, one Goofy tie,

  E-Z rolling paper for trees,

  four cotton boxers (one fly

  silk pair), one necklace of cowrie

  shells, one scrap of blue sky.

  Rehab

  A scrape of metal chair on tile.

  Sign-in. The portly counselor,

  Mr. Wilkins, who prods your old

  lover to sit up straight for your visit while

  scribbling notes on a pad —

  he doesn’t know anything. Anything.

  When he leaves the drab office, Angel clasps your

  fingers in his dry hands. You hate rehab.

 
Its cigarette death-air. His stubble. Torn T-shirt.

  Hair thinning to peaks on his forehead.

  His eyes, shadows of his young eyes.

  How they search you, hurt.

  You gaze up at his bare temples instead,

  afraid to stare back with less. Or with a lie.

  Guilt

  Try as she might, she can’t envision

  a future with him beyond Bushwick —

  tethered with children, yoked by familia,

  she cannot wait the eternity of Angel’s sentence

  while she’s still in the full bloom of womanhood.

  Guilt chews her insides, but she can

  no longer hide from herself the truth

  of their unraveling, how her love for him has

  become stained by all the grit & grime, dimmed

  by their troubled, turbulent time together.

  She stays awake, sleepless all night,

  trying to decide her future ~

  to let go ~ go for her own freedom,

  or cling on to his sinking boat.

  Countryless

  Ay, they were two children lost

  under the merciless glare of city lights.

  A Corean and Boricua, diaspora kids,

  brave enough to ride

  underground trains like metallic waves,

  just to catch da electric surge of a hug

  from a budding red ~ gold love…

  Throbbing. Hot. Burning.

  When she met him, she felt the loneliness

  in him call out to the loneliness in her.

  If her pain folded up

  like a tight virgin rose, his pain

  pulled her in like a gaping black hole.

  Quiet, proud boy. His honey~brown eyes.

  She sees them as two kids hand-holding over a glittering street,

  lampposts arching overhead like acacia trees,

  young ones in search of a thornless bed to sleep.

  Seeds

  Towards the end, her wishes for Angel grow

  small and hard as a handful of dry sunflower seeds:

  she prays he’ll get his GED…

  his baby brother, Rafi, will grow

  tall as a beanstalk…all

  AZT cocktails sure as magic potions. She prays

 

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