Equal Opportunity

The american deputy assistant secretary of defense

for Equal Opportunity

and safety

is a home girl.

Blindness slashes our tapestry to shreds.

The moss-green military tailoring sets off her color

beautifully

she says “when I stand up to speak in uniform

you can believe everyone takes notice!”

Superimposed skull-like across her trim square shoulders

dioxin-smear

the stench of napalm upon growing cabbage

the chug and thud of Corsairs in the foreground

advance like a blush across her cheeks

up the unpaved road outside Grenville, Grenada

An M–16 bayonet gleams

slashing away the wooden latch

of a one-room slat house in Soubise

mopping upweapons searchpockets of resistance

ImeldayoungBlackin a tattered headcloth

standing to one side on her left foot

takes notice

one wrist behind her hip the other

palm-up beneath her chinwatching

armed men in moss-green jumpsuits turn out her shack

watchingmashed-up nutmeg trees

the trampled cocoa pods

graceless broken stalks of almost ripe banana

her sister has been missing now ten days

Beside the shattered waterpipe downroad

Granny Lou’s consolations

If it was only kill

they’d wanted to kill we

many more would have died

look at Lebanon

so as wars go this was an easy one

But for we here

who never woke up before

to see plane shitting fire into chimney

it was a damn awful lot!

The baby’s father buried without his legs

burned bones in piles along the road

“any Cubans around here, girl? any guns?”

singed tree-ferns curl and jerk in the mortar rhythms

strumming up from shoreuphill a tree explodes

showering the house with scraps of leaves

the sweetish smell of unseen rotting flesh.

For a while there was almost enough

waterenough riceenough quinine

the child tugs at her waistband

but she does not move quickly

she has heard how nervous these green men are

with their grenades and sweaty helmets

who offer cigarettes and chocolate but no bread

free batteries and herpes but no doctors

no free buses to the St. Georges market

no reading lessons in the brilliant afternoons

bodies strewn along Telescope Beach

these soldiers say are foreigners

but she has seen the charred bits of familiar cloth

and knows what to say to any invader

with an M–16 rifle held ready

while searching her cooking shed

overturning the empty pots with his apologetic grin

Imelda steps forward

the child pressing against her knees

“no guns, man, no guns here. we glad you come. you carry

water?”

The american deputy assistant secretary of defense

for equal opportunity and safety

pauses in her speechlicks her dry lips

“as you can see the Department has

a very good record

of equal opportunity for our women”

swims toward safety

through a lake of her own blood.