the afterlife your friend, he lived with you for two years. armando found your death from my questions, angry as a man interrupted by storm, or left at the last stop out of Tuscson. did you meet my father when he lived alone in the mesas for a year as you did? your family moved to New Mexico, walked through the desert. does your sister like the smell of your dresser she inherited, does your brother shuffle his cards by himself? how could they live so close and not feel the dry wind, bringing sand and dust inside your room? today, i read your obituary in fragments, bits and pieces of newspaper, how your life became: buried, entombed, a statue. inside, i can't read a word, the sayings God once told his children to read over the body. what happens now? |
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