13 WAYS OF LOOKING AT 13

1.

You touch your forefinger to the fat clots in the blood,

then lift its iron stench to look close, searching the globs

of black scarlet for the dimming swirl of dead children.

You thread one thick pad’s cottony tail, then the other,

through the little steel guides of the belt. You stand and lift

the contraption, press your thighs close to adjust the bulk,

then bend to pull up coarse white cotton panties bleached blue,

and just to be safe, you pin the bottom of the pad

to the shredding crotch of the Carter’s. And then you spritz

the guilty air with the cloying kiss of FDS.

It’s time to begin the game of justifying ache,

time to name the mystery prickling that’s riding your skin.

You’re convinced the boys can smell you, and they can, they can.

2.

Right now, this Tuesday in July, nothing’s headier

than the words Sheen! Manageable! Bounce! Squinting into

the smeared mirror, you search your ghetto-ripe head for them,

you probe with greased fingers, spreading paths in the chaos

wide enough for the advertised glimmer to escape,

but your snarls hold tight to their woven dry confounding.

Fevered strands snap under the drag of the wiry brush

and order unfurls, while down the hall Mama rotates

the hot comb in a bleary blaze, smacks her joyful gum.

Still, TV bellows its promise. You witness the pink

snap of the perfect neck, hear the impossible vow—

Shampoo with this! Sheen! Bounce! Her cornsilk head is gospel,

it’s true. C’mon chile! Even Mama’s summoning burns.

3.

Ms. Stein scribbled a word on the blackboard, said Who can

pronounce this? and the word was anemone and from

that moment you first felt the clutter of possible

in your mouth, from the time you stumbled through the rhythm

and she slow-smiled, you suddenly knew you had the right

to be explosive, to sling syllables through back doors,

to make up your own damned words just when you needed them.

All that day, sweet anemone tangled in your teeth,

spurted sugar tongue, led you to the dictionary

where you were assured that it existed, to the cave

of the bathroom where you warbled it in bounce echo,

and, finally convinced you owned that teeny gospel,

you wrote it again and again and again and a—.

4.

Trying hard to turn hips to slivers, sway to stutter,

you walk past the Sinclair station where lanky boys, dust

in their hair, dressed in their uniforms of oil and thud,

rename you pussy with their eyes. They bring sounds shudder

and blue from their throats just for you, serve up the ancient

sonata of skin drum and conch shell, sing suggesting woos

of AM radio, boom, boom, How you gon’ just walk

on by like that? and suddenly you know why you are

stitched so tight, crammed like a flash bomb into pinafore,

obeying Mama’s instructions to be a baby

as long as you can. Because it’s a man’s world and James

Brown is gasoline, the other side of slow zippers.

He is all of it, the pump, pump, the growled please please please.

5.

You try to keep your hands off your face, but the white-capped

pimples might harbor evil. It looks like something cursed

is trying to escape your cheeks, your whole soul could be

involved. So you pinch, squeeze, and pop, let the smelly snow

splash the mirror, slather your fresh-scarred landscape with creams

that clog and strangle. At night, you look just like someone

obsessed with the moon, its gruff superstitions, its lies.

Your skin is a patchwork of wishing. You scrub and dab

and mask and surround, you bombard, spritz, and peel, rubbing

alcohol, flesh-toned Clearasil that pinkens and cakes

while new dirtworms shimmy beneath the pummeled surface

of you. Every time you touch your face, you leave a scar.

Hey, you. Every time you touch your face, you leave a scar.

6.

You want it all: chicken wings with bubbled skin fried tight,

salmon cakes in syrup, the most improbable parts

of swine, oily sardines on saltines splashed in red spark,

chitlins nurtured and scraped in Saturday assembly,

buttered piecrusts stuffed with sweet potatoes and sugar,

gray cheese conjured from the heads of hogs. All that Dixie

dirt binds, punches your insides flat, reteaches the blind

beat of your days. Like Mama and her mother before

her, you pulse on what is thrown away—gray hog guts stewed

improbable and limp, scrawny chicken necks merely

whispering meat. You will live beyond the naysayers,

your rebellious heart constructed of lard and salt, your

life labored but long. You are built of what should kill you.

7.

Always treat white folks right, your mama’s mantra again

and yet again, because they give you things. Like credit,

compliments, passing grades, government jobs, direction,

extra S&H stamps, produce painted to look fresh,

a religion. When the insurance man came, she snapped

herself alive, hurriedly rearranged her warm bulk. He

was balding badly, thatches of brown on a scabbed globe.

Just sign here, he hissed, staring crave into her huge breasts,

pocketing the death cash, money she would pay and pay

and never see again. C’mere girl, say hello to

Mister Fred. She had taught you to bow. She taught him

to ignore the gesture, to lock his watering eyes

to yours and lick his dry lips with a thick, coated tongue.

8.

In the bathroom of the what-not joint on the way to

school, you get rid of the starch and billowed lace, barrettes

taming unraveling braids, white kneesocks and sensible

hues. From a plastic bag, you take out electric blue

eye shadow, platforms with silver-glittered heels, neon

fishnets, and a blouse that doesn’t so much button as

snap shut. The transformation takes five minutes, and you

emerge feeling like a budding lady but looking,

in retrospect, like a blind streetwalker bursting from

a cocoon. This is what television does, turns your

mother into clueless backdrop, fills your pressed head with

the probability of thrum. Your body becomes

just not yours anymore. It’s a dumb little marquee.

9.

With your bedroom door closed, you are skyscraper bouffant,

peach foundation, eyelashes like upturned claws. You are

exuding ice, pinched all over by earrings, you are

way too much woman for this room. The audience has

one chest, a single shared chance to gasp. They shudder, heave,

waiting for you to open your mouth and break their hearts.

Taking the stage, you become an S, pour ache into your

hip swings, tsk tsk as the front row collapses. Damn, they

want you. You lift the microphone, something illegal

comes out of you, a sound like titties and oil. Mama

flings the door open with a church version of your name.

Then you are pimpled, sexless, ashed and doubledutch knees.

You are spindles. You are singing into a hairbrush.

10.

This is what everyone else is doing: skating in

soul circles, skinning shins, tongue-kissing in the coatroom,

skimming alleys for Chicago rats, failing English, math,

crushing curfew, lying about yesterday and age,

slipping Woolworth’s bounty into an inside pocket,

sprouting breasts. Here is what everyone else is doing:

sampling the hotness of hootch, grinding under blue light,

getting turned around in the subway, flinging all them

curse words, inhaling a quick supper before supper

fried up in hot Crisco and granulated sugar,

sneaking out through open windows when the night goes dark,

calling mamas bitches under their breath, staying up

till dawn to see what hides. What you are doing: Reading.

11.

You are never too old. And you are never too world,

too almost grown, you are never correct, no matter

how many times you are corrected. It is never

too late, never too early to be told to cross the

street to the place where the wild stuff is, to suffer her

instructions: No, not that little switch, get the big one,

the one that makes that good whipping sound when the breeze blows,

and you are never too fast crossing the boulevard

to bring it back while winged sedans carve jazz on your path.

You climb the stairs, she screams Get up here! The door to where

you live with her flies open. She snatches the thorned branch,

whips it a hundred times across the backs of your legs.

You want her to die. Not once, no. Many times. Gently.

12.

That boy does not see you. He sees through you, past your tone

of undecided earth. You are the exact shade of

the failed paper bag test, the Aunt Esther, you are hair

forever turning back in the direction from which

it came. You are clacking knees and nails bitten to blood.

Stumbling forth in black, Jesus-prescribed shoes, you have no

knowledge of his knowledge of hip sling and thrust. That boy

does not see you. So squeeze your eyes shut and imagine

your mouth touching the swell of his forearm. Imagine

just your name’s first syllable in the sugared well of

his throat. Dream of all the ways he is not walking past

you again, turning his eyes to the place where you are,

where you’re standing, where you shake, where you pray, where you aren’t.

13.

You’re almost fourteen. And you think you’re ready to push

beyond the brutal wisdoms of the one and the three,

but some nagging crave in you doesn’t want to let go.

You suspect that you will never be this unfinished,

all Hail Mary and precipice, stuttering sashay,

fuses in your swollen chest suddenly lit, spitting,

and you’ll need to give your hips a name for what they did

while you weren’t there. You’ll miss the pervasive fever that

signals bloom, the sore lessons of jumprope in your calves.

This is the last year your father is allowed to touch

you. Sighing, you push Barbie’s perfect body through the

thick dust of a top shelf. There her prideful heart thunders.

She has hardened you well. She has taught you everything.