A Killing, By Benjamin Alire Saenz
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LAS CRUCES — Nearly 1,000 mourners filled Immaculate Heart of Mary Cathedral Tuesday for the funeral of Amy Houser, one of four Las Cruces residents slain in a robbery. Saturday morning, two gunmen entered the bowling alley, rounded up Houser and six others, and shot each twice in the back of the head as they lay on the floor.
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Feb. 10, 1990
For Gloria
What she made in her body is broken.
Lost, she searches, everywhere, for news
of her daughter. She looks with want,
her hunger controls her now. Is she hurt--
my Amy? I want to reach my fist down my throat
and force out the word that is
food: She is alive. I want to hand her
this banquet, serve her, watch her feast
on the goodness.
I ache for sleep
but she disturbs. She comes to me.
She is running out of the bakery still
wearing her apron, stained
from her morning work. She who bakes
today will not see the bread rise.
She is in tears, but the salt
that flows from within her
seasons her face with hope.
She waits for news, arms ready
to hold again. She reaches,
breaks through a barricade in front
of that place--a shooting. She grabs
a policeman’s arm making him show
his face--I see that it is me. Is she hurt?
I feel her
body against mine as she digs her whole
self into me--a root clinging to soil
but the soil is spent. Her howl
is a wind that runs through me
daily--blows my blood like sand
and I become a desert that knows only
thirst. I see her taking my face between
her hands--her smile holding the question.
Patient, she waits for an answer. Come,
woman, I will take you to her tomb. You
will see that it is empty. We go to the place
where they have laid her. But I am not
strong enough to roll back the stone.
From “Calendar of Dust” by Benjamin Alire Saenz. (Broken Moon Press: $10) 1991 Reprinted by permission. Saenz has just won a 1993 Lannan Literary Fellowship for his poetry (see Page 10) . This is his favorite poem from “Calendar of Dust.”
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