Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10         Page 67

Heart of Stars

astronomers discover radio signal “heartbeat” from across universe — mit, 13 july 22

 a single heartbeat

revealing repeating

billions of light years away

passionate pulsing

the heart’s pounding

is a song carried this far this long

to my eavesdropping

astronomers heard it first

they assert

it’s radio waves

from neutron stars impossibly far

now they’ll grasp how fast

we’re expanding exploding dispersing

disappearing

in a stellar wind

seekers proclaim order

in frequencies sorted

high low above below

they know

what it should mean to me

hearing seeing

cancer radiation being

numbers along waves spectrum

science-deafened heartbeat-lessened

i hear a provocative

rhythm driven

across the universe

echoing seduction

we meld in neutron eruption

radiating our own magnetic waves

another billion years

they will listen with intuition

imagine our passion unfastened

reaching the future

in a resonant

imploding

heartbeat …

it must have stopped by now

it must have stopped

Adobe Oven

I twist my body to squeeze my belly

between the greasy gas range

and yellow-tiled sink counter.

Curse the pendejo who

crammed the kitchen

into an 8×8 box.

Wedge my torso into the cranny by the front door

to escape my sweaty, cramped apartment.

Outside my adobe cave, the West Texas summer

sends a dust devil down my street, tumbleweed in tow.

“Ay! Que calor!” a woman tells me

as she wobbles past.

“Tórrido,” I agree

watching ripples rise from burnt asphalt

where an ancient arroyo once spread.

Weary from 10 hours scouring hotel-suite baños,

her short, heavy legs force her body

further uphill.

Beyond her, the raw sienna rocks

of the Franklin Mountains

open the pass that names the dilating city

stolen from the desert’s domain.

Like angry javelinas,

new malls and nightclubs,

casas y calles

dart into the dusty kiln

of prickly pear and mesquite,

breach the Chihuahuan Desert.

Once a yucca or saguaro thrived

where the concrete front stoop

burns my thighs.

I survey the barrio corner where I live,

inhale menudo from down the street.

Taste sweat that trickles down my face

and wonder if cacti and rattlers

will ever

reclaim their land.

Angel On the Roofie

listen here I knew 

your song was in the sky

and when I took it down

strange things began to happen

How to Invent a Life

you were such a bright spot in the universe

your pictures and words your colors

and sounds

are pure light

I keep seeing you

on the streets

of the east village

in the building

in my head

you reverberate    

and remain

© Tracy Platero: Wait for a Friend

El Paso Dream

Juarez tethers me like a balero

with a bridge instead of string.

I tread Stanton Street’s crammed path

over the nearly waterless Rio Grande.

I could have walked on its dehydrated bed.

Tanned leather’s weathered smell

infuses the mercado’s air.

Piñatas, penuche.

Day of the Dead disguises and candles,

coupled like an afterlife marriage,

entice tourists to a tienda.

Street vendors

make mariachi marionetas dance

— ¡baila, baila!

like I’ll never be able to.

Still, I hand over my pesos.

Now I possess a tangle of string,

wooden legs, tiny guitar.

I’ll figure it out when I get home … quizás.

I stop at a corner bar for Negra Modelo,

risky time for beer.

La Linea y Los Aztecas, Los Mexicles y Artistas Asesinos

and a hundred more gangs

whose names I can’t remember —                

own the Juarez streets at night.

I’m a gabacho; I must leave.

Windless and weak,

I pant on my bicycle up Scenic Drive

past the painted white “A” on the Franklin Mountains.

Gabriel is with me, Sylvia and Arturo, Melchor y Timo —

but we never come here together.

Now images rapid fire like a cartel’s AR-15s:

Sun Bowl, Sunland Park, Fort Bliss, Chamizal

Texas Western wins it all in ’66.

Nunchucks and knives in the halls of Austin High.

San Jacinto Plaza, alligators in central pond.

    (No one knows why gators in a desert town.)

Menudo written on a wall in letters four feet tall.

    No need. I can smell it four city blocks back.

My garden of prickly pears, yuccas,

barrel cactus and pampa grass.

I know it’s a dream

    Like I know the El Paso I knew

    is lost in desert dust:

A winding tumbleweed, thrown by West Texas wind.

    Still jumbled.

    Still gone.

Good-bye

Her Viking ship cradles her, anticipates flaming arrows. I linger

beside her: Her quest to become an angel haunting

like demons. An organ’s tinny notes summon me;

I leave the longship blaze. Friends allege:

She’ll be an angel now. Empty

words I know aren’t true.

Angels can’t fly from

wildfire so eternal:

ashes imprison

ashes.

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