homecoming
ROBERT IS HERE, the sign promises
in big white letters scrawled on the roof
and robert is here somewhere inside
the shack. I don’t remember when robert
was not a fruit farmer in this swamp
with a sunburnt scalp and a thick
white beard. In the third grade he showed me that
the rivers of sawgrass run smooth when I drag my fingers
up the blades but draw blood from
the pulp of my palm when I drag it
down. The Everglades is all dust till you hit
this place, robert’s shack, where the egg fruit custard
drips down my throat and leaves my mucus slick
so I have to spit in the only gravel I have
ever known. Louis’s dad has been here as long as Robert has,
this same block and this same sun, except Louis’s dad is
stuck in the jailhouse with the striking white walls
that Robert sells fruit in front of. When Louis and I went
the mamey sapote shakes were almost
thick as fudge. I half-thought Louis would say
something akin to going in and seeing the prison
if only to talk to his father, but he just
husked his sugar cane stalk till the layers piled
onto the gravel by the prison gates. My sweat in this swamp
is always sweet, between the soft of my neck
dribbling down to my collar bones and the
underbelly of my knees. This sweat is the only thing
Louis’s dad and Robert will ever know.
We are all stuck here, in this river of
sawgrass that someone named ever-glades
like they don’t ever end, ever, cause we are
always home again here. Some of us have chosen
this swamp, and others stare out the window
imagining where the home will end
where they do not sell fruit in the dust.