As the Sun Goes Down
Javier Sandoval
A summer beneath stop-light suns, I’d cuss the sky from under the moto’s engine
as Amá brought out sweetened coffee, puffed orejas, her shade falling over
—the only tree in the yard. Ya para. What you even need a moto for?
Stuck nut, she stalled me from my cousins out drinking in parking lots, street racing
by white suburbs, blonde ladies. But all I wanted was my light to lead me
beyond familiar fences, to get lost. Oil squirting in my eyes, the night blot
of my future closing in on us, I knew if I shut them, pulled back hard,
something had to give. But the wires sparked & snapped, like bad phone
calls with my father. When the starter choked, it gasped like a child jumping
back into a closet. When I covered my face with blackened hands, my heart
turned to some hot-running gasket blown. To relieve pressure
I yanked the torque wrench, chucked the bolt into the street, watched it flint
under the headlights above. There were no male models as my knuckles
skinned bare beneath the spinning gears, only the headshakes of my mother
passing me bowls of frijoles, four or five tortillas torn, as I fought to fix this
all myself.
But in star-lit flashes of faith, the road mount would throttle. Then mutter silent,
slouched on the concrete littered with cigarettes, its chrome pipes stained
like all his promises. I quit praying to the machine. Quit praying to anything.
I’m still not sure if I ever figured it out, or if stomping on the engine had
jostled something into place, but when I cranked it roaring in the orange
thrum of the streetlight, I swear even the moon raised its brow, and nodded.
I rode through the night’s silver-lined roads, its pitched forests, its shadowed brush.
I took the entire road, I did not see the predator eyes peering through the dark-
clawed thorns and branches, the grizzled bark. I had birthed myself, or maybe
nothing had, but the yellow lines looked more golden as my front tire curved
over the frowning horizons.
The next morning, when the cop lumbered over to where my moto’s lock was cut
and black tears trailed to somewhere far, the sun’s red glare streaked
from one sky gash to the other. The cop shrugged like my father
when I asked if there was any chance of catching who’d stolen my iron. My mother
butted in, They musta waited for him to fix it. All that work for nothing.
I tried to warn you. The cop piled on, The real shame’s they’re just gonna
strip it back down for parts. But cheer up, son, you’re still young enough
to have her drive you around. Faith was only here so briefly, but it still has me
searching for a glimpse of my old bike rounding the curve,
of finding that source of power that’ll carry me toward greater awes & wonders.
Or maybe it’s just the fostered suspicion of my mother having called & paid a cousin
to clip my journey before kicking off. I asked the sun, the cop, Ama, & the one
that’s gone, Are you sure there’s nothing I can do? No one else to help me?
But I couldn’t even gaze up from the black stains over grass. I knew
they all just looked the same.