Bedford & S 1st
A. MARTINEZ
Audio: A. Martinez reads.
I.
Altagracia, Señora, Mama, Grandma Tata,
the matriarch sits slouched at the table,
watches the cooking channel, her chin
in hand and her back a mountain
from years of this posture. She serves us
but never sits when we eat rice and beans
and lettuce so crispy and light, drizzled
with olive oil. But now that we are finished
she is resting in front of the tv. She of few
words, points to the onions sizzling in the tv pan.
Her skin is black walnut, thick
like hide, but softest touch. She holds
my hand like the child I am even now
and says, “Yo te bendigo. Dios te bendiga.”
I don’t think I believe in god, but her prayers swaddle me.
Every night she prays the rosary, we
her livelihood. She, the pious. A crooked dark finger
lifts over each bead for one of us.
Her face a woodcut carved of the same
expression — the weight of caretaking
Eight children,
twenty-four grandchildren
Thirty-seven great-grandchildren.
And now two great-great-grandchildren.
Through this her capacity to love, grown.
She rarely smiles.
She is smiling at me when I arrive.
She is smiling at my son when she meets
him for the first time.
Though he is dead, she is smiling at my father,
her youngest son, through us.
We have spent so many hours here.
II.
I stood limply on the roof —
This the last time I ever was at her house.
When we, the cousins, were young, ran
up the stone stairs, teasing the roof. The piss
and graffiti interior. Our parents yelling
below to stay off.
Today, I stood in each room and soaked
as much of it into my skin as I could. These things
cannot be captured by photograph. Even
this poem is not the vessel.
I studied the yellow walls. These piles of
papers and bedding. Sterilites stacked to the ceiling,
some porcelain figurine from one of the cousins’
sweet sixteens. Everything
will be thrown out, my aunt told me, except the mattresses
which would make their way down to their house
in the DR. There are photos on the wall cinematic
in their age. Airbrushed softness. One of Mama
as a young woman, with that same solemn brow. Darkest
ink for her unblemished skin. One of a man, perhaps
my grandfather, though I’m not sure and I never asked.
I know it wasn’t true but couldn’t help think they meant to
throw out these too.
III.
First time I remember coming to New York
I am four and it is hard to be there.
We take the train. I caressing my Barbie, still puke
in the front middle seat of my aunt’s car. My eyes
can’t see the street below and the December
snow is more beautiful like this.
I am furious everyone says my name wrong, how
could we really be family?
I watch them boil
water to bathe in and
I am wholly taut with objections
to this.
To them.
We leave our shoes on.
Rinse cups from the cupboard
before we drink.
IV.
I stood quietly on the roof — we transmute to
ashy silhouettes in the orange setting sun.
Below Brooklyn terrain, buildings erect the new hipster tetris.
One courtyard below has a fortress-style perimeter
to what end?
My aunties always telling me
to watch my purse when I go out in Williamsburg,
a remnant of when they first arrived here.
Things are different now.
Yes, I wanted something better for my grandmother.
I wanted her not to live in a home that draped
precariously above her.
Yes, they took their money,
but for decades why
the molded crumbling bathroom.
The night rat she housed in the kitchen.
The hyperbolic crack dividing drywall ceiling.
You’ll move in here with new floors and no holes
to speak of, you piece of shit. I hope you enjoy her
home.
V.
Slowly we all begin to arrive. We
from Chicago, some from Cleveland, Torrington,
the Bronx, and some from a few blocks away.
Some of the cousins have spent all day
drinking Heineken together or that saccharine booze
in styrofoam cups you can purchase on the street.
Always around town listening to bachata so loud
the music dissolving ammunicious in the air.
We gather in Mama’s apartment. Each
of us gives a kiss and asks for her blessing.
I drink a beer as they’re passed around. More
arrive and the room now saturated
with side conversations, the television, the radio, a few
squawk into their phones, some dance, and embrace
the babies passed around. Our almond
eyes shared. Our skin a rainbow of browns. Braids,
weaves, waves, curls, and hair brushed back so tight
it lifted the face. This, the family.
And this, the last time here together.
All five aunties sit judiciously against the wall
of the room. They take turns holding their
grandchildren and grand-nieces and nephews.
Take turns arguing lovingly and laughing.
One buzzed cousin accuses—Mama should not have to move
and the rest of us silent.
“Why are you taking her away from us?” she imputes
what we do not have the courage to.
But today the second youngest great-grandchild
receives a blessing from Mama. We gather
around them, Mama sprinkles bottled
water on a leggy sprig of basil. Flings it around
at the baby, the room, at us, as she prays, we giggle
drunkenly as the droplets hit two dozen umber faces in April.
This joy is an alternate funeral. One in which
we are no longer the cared for. But hope is made by shedding.
A. MARTINEZ is a poet, visual artist, mother, and community and arts organizer living in Chicago. She received her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago's Writing Program and is a proud recipient of the 2019 3Arts Make a Wave Award. A.Martinez produces community and cultural events including events that center on and for mothers of color in the arts. In addition to her creative practice, A.Martinez works as an arts administrator.
A.Martinez will self-release a chapbook of poetry and drawings, Turn, in 2021. Her work explores identity, memory, spirituality, and the body. You can find more at alyssahydemartinez.com
Originally published March 2021 in poiesis 2.1 by w the trees.