poems in the march sadness tradition: vickie Vértiz
lover's letter
for Morrissey fans
Because we craved permission to be despondent in English
Desperate for words to hide erections for other boys
Behind Trapper Keepers,
To document Kotex leaks in our journals
We needed
To be maudlin, to be untranslatable
To do this in private, in the company
Of someone with rank
We hunted for you in crates, battled mold and being broke
Scraped pennies from grandparents who collected
Cans to feed us
We needed to hear your '50s guitar in the key of sorrow
Mexican and not, born here or not, our duplexes
South of the 60 freeway
No Movement murals cushion our daily gray sky
Our 99 cent interchanges
To your voice, we work our lives away in UPS trucks, as perfect
Receptionists, in community college forever
This is how you hate the queen
I seethed at the church for making me dirty
So we were instant friends
You made me want a public transit death, so we
Could be together
We saved you from the has-been dollar bin
We’re your American Manchester Day Dream, empty tire factories, soot-
Covered eyelids, cracked front
Teeth and bleeding lips
We fondled your open shirts and built a country around you
Of sidelong glances and glum gladiolus
When you first saw our tight black jeans and creepers,
You could taste our penchant for racing Chevys down
Slauson with no headlights
We're your wistful twins, that boy you won’t share
You watched us make love in cemeteries
Made us trim our sideburns, Las Vegas Elvis beats made
Us jump like beans
We are fatalists by nations on all sides
Death happy because it constantly raps at our door
In the carcinogenic heart of this Manchester
Our black lungs sing with you
Because every time we listen
It’s our last day, too
Vickie Vértiz is a writer from Bell Gardens, the rust belt of Los Angeles. Her work can be found in Huizache, the New York Times Magazine, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and Nepantla, among other publications. Her collection of poetry, Palm Frond with Its Throat Cut, was selected by the University of Arizona Press, Camino del Sol series for publication in September 2017. Vickie is also a VONA and Macondo Fellow who teaches writing and has read her work in Mexico City, France, Japan, and throughout the United States.