1. Nani

    Sitting at her table, she serves
    the sopa de arroz to me
    instinctively, and I watch her,
    the absolute mama, and eat words
    I might have had to say more
    out of embarrassment. To speak, 
    now-foreign words I used to speak,
    too, dribble down her mouth as she serves
    me albondigas. No more 
    than a third are easy to me. 
    By the stove she does something with words
    and looks at me only with her
    back. I am full. I tell her
    I taste the mint, and watch her speak 
    smiles at the stove. All my words 
    make her smile. Nani never serves
    herself, she only watches me
    with her skin, her hair. I ask for more.

    I watch the mama warming more
    tortillas for me. I watch her 
    fingers in the flame for me.
    Near her mouth, I see a wrinkle speak
    of a man whose body serves
    the ants like she serves me, then more words 
    from more wrinkles about children, words
    about this and that, flowing more
    easily from these other mouths. Each serves
    as a tremendous string around her,
    holding her together. They speak
    nani was this and that to me
    and I wonder just how much of me 
    will die with her, what were the words
    I could have been, was. Her insides speak
    through a hundred wrinkles, now, more
    than she can bear, steel around her,
    shouting, then, What is this thing she serves?

    She asks me if I want more.
    I own no words to stop her.
    Even before I speak, she serves.

    - Alberto Ríos