I understood it. Never broke a window. You
know why not? Cuz my father, he was a smart
guy. I come home from school late. My mom tells
me she’ll tell my father. And my father wasn’t
a guy to mess with. He wasn’t a Nobel prize
winner or nothing, my father, but he knew what
day was garbage day in Kingsbridge. He’d grab
me by my little wiseass arm so I could feel
my pulse speedin up, and made sure I never came
home late again. Then he’d interrogate me, say
he knew something. He’d tell me all sorts of
things. Told me my brother Angel saw me smoking
cigarettes by the kiosk on the Concourse. I
didn’t do nothin, I’d tell him. But see, you
couldn’t trick the old man, not my old man.
You’re talking, Jimmy. Jesus.
Anyways, like I was sayin: law and property.
Two things I always knew as a kid. But yous.
No, Jimmy. You guys, I don’t know.
I dab each tiny bleeding hole with a green
gel that clots blood, given to me by my brother
in law, the barber.
When we wrote on things we had a reason to.
For stickball you need an X. So we’d paint an
X. Nothin like today.
I guess what I’m askin you today is: Why? Why
do you walk around like you got nothin to lose
and nothin to gain, with no respect for anybody
or anythin? These walls weren’t put here magically.
Men worked with their hands to make them. Guys
like my father helped build the Bronx. Yous
can’t just decide to take all that away, everything
those people worked to bring together. Here’s
Lieutenant Dacy to talk some more with yous
– you guys.
Besides having a fat wife, a whiny kid, and
a sloppy attitude about life, he’s a moron.
No, I won’t include that in my speech at IS
86.
I push the toothbrush into my teeth rubbing
it up and down on my front teeth and tongue,
something I also do for our dog, the fucking
breath that thing has. Caramba!
In the sides of my eyes lines grow like the
red I now notice on my eyeballs. Turn into a
fuckin tree branch one of these days.
Christ. Intermediate School 86, 1964. Built
by the same assholes who built the projects:
concrete legos, the inside green like a hospital
so the blood don’t show.
I forget I brushed my teeth and finish the
cold cup of coffee left on the sink.
I’d like for someone right now to tell me I
look good. I feel like one of them old pipes
rusted on the inside, about to burst any day
and take up half the street, the rivers of filth
that course through me every day.
I close my eyes and leave my image alone on
the mirror. I see the Bronx River crowded with
arcs and roadways. Although I can remember when
some of those bridges were built, I can’t help
but feel that’s the closest I’ll ever get to
ancient.