Sightreading
His name's Natan. Hers—Ventura.
I say they're my grandparents
but they will never even imagine me.
I imagine them separated into lines.
The women, the men. There they are
in a sea of strangers. Speechless.
Ladino, their mother tongue,
is no mother. She will not tuck the blankets
under their chins at night. She is a flat tire
that gets them nowhere while all around them
people are squealing a language of trains
chafing to a halt. Metal of the wheel
on the metal of the rail. Soft whines
pealing into high-pitched fricatives. Their lines
meander like S's snaking a field made barren
from footfall. Their scalps are closely shaven.
They are holding their arms in V' s
that end in splayed palms to cover
what they can of their naked bodies. Ventura
scans and scans the groups of children
like a speedreader in desperate search
of her own familiar characters. Natan prays
for a twist in the plot. And the building they see
shrouded in the distance? They decipher its meaning
like an ancient code, entertain
multiple interpretations: warm showers,
rest stop, the four corners of their own wood bunks?
Natan, Ventura, my faceless lovelies,
my hope-filled unreliable narrators
will never bring themselves to concede
to their epilogue, their final guttural stop.