We were afraid of everything: earthquakes, strangers, smoke above the canyon, the fire that would come running and eat up our house, the Claymore girls, big-boned, rough, razor blades tucked in their ratted hair. We were terrified of polio, tuberculosis, being found out, the tent full of boys two blocks over, the kick ball, the asphalt, the pain-filled rocks, the glass-littered canyon, the deep cave gouged in its side, the wheelbarrow crammed with dirty magazines, beer cans, spit-laced butts. We were afraid of hands, screen doors slammed by angry mothers, abandoned cars, their slumped back seats, the chain-link fence we couldn't climb fast enough, electrical storms, blackouts, girlfights behind the pancake house, Original Sin, sidewalk cracks and the corner crematorium, loose brakes on the handlebars of our bikes. It came alive behind our eyes: ant mounds, wasp nests, the bird half-eaten on the scratchy grass, chained dogs, the boggy creekbed, the sewer main that fed it, the game where you had to hold your breath until you passed out. We were afraid of being poor, dumb, yelled at, ignored, invisible as the nuclear dust we were told to wipe from lids before we opened them in the kitchen, the fat roll of meat that slid into the pot, sleep, dreams, the soundless swing of the father's ringed fist, the mother's face turned away, the wet bed, anything red, the slow leak, the stain on the driveway, oily gears soaking in a shallow pan, busted chairs stuffed in the rafters of the neighbor's garage, the Chevy's twisted undersides jacked up on blocks, wrenches left scattered in the dirt. It was what we knew best, understood least, it whipped through our bodies like fire or sleet. We were lured by the Dumpster behind the liquor store, fissures in the baked earth, the smell of singed hair, the brassy hum of high-tension towers, train tracks, buzzards over a ditch, black widows, the cat with one eye, the red spot on the back of the skirt, the fallout shelter's metal door hinged to the rusty grass, the back way, the wrong path, the night's wide back, the coiled bedsprings of the sister's top bunk, the wheezing, the cousin in the next room tapping on the wall, anything small. We were afraid of clothesline, curtain rods, the worn hairbrush, the good-for-nothings we were about to become, reform school, the long ride to the ocean on the bus, the man at the back of the bus, the underpass. We were afraid of fingers of pickleweed crawling over the embankment, the French Kiss, the profound silence of dead fish, burning sand, rotting elastic in the waistbands of our underpants, jellyfish, riptides, eucalyptus bark unraveling, the pink flesh beneath, the stink of seaweed, seagulls landing near our feet, their hateful eyes, their orange-tipped beaks stabbing the sand, the crumbling edge of the continent we stood on, waiting to be saved, the endless, wind-driven waves.© Dorianne Laux
from Smoke, BOA Editions, Ltd.