The Mailer Review/Volume 13, 2019/Remember the Alamo: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
{|cellpadding=5 style="width: 50%;" | {|cellpadding=5 style="width: 50%;" | ||
|<div style="text-align: center;">| | |<div style="text-align: center;">| | ||
Sal Cetrano | Sal Cetrano | ||
</div> | |||
Line 42: | Line 43: | ||
''have fallen'',” she cries. “''They want the mission now.''” | ''have fallen'',” she cries. “''They want the mission now.''” | ||
{{Review}} | {{Review}} | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Remember the Alamo}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Remember the Alamo}} | ||
[[Category:Poetry (MR)]] | [[Category:Poetry (MR)]] |
Revision as of 21:35, 2 March 2021
« | The Mailer Review • Volume 13 Number 1 • 2019 | » |
Sal Cetrano
the man whose burning compulsion is to wear a dress, the woman who gleefully sells him her old ones, the 90’s girl with self-help tape, who masturbates before triptych mirrors and gives birth to the sunrise— and scores of others—are trampling my fescue, correct mob demanding to be let in: famished Jacquerie antsy to hand out all my cake, but I have no cake. I crawl naked to the doors and set the latches. “Let us in!” they chant. “We know you’re in there!” “Who are you people?!” I ask. “What do you want?” “None of your business!” they yell. “Just let us in. Sooner or later, everybody lets us in. You’ll see!” The walls begin to sag. Screams and gunfire mingle. The armoire buttressing the bedroom door trembles. I prop my back against the wall. A window shatters. I hone my Bowie on the skull of an Amway salesman. Then comes my Mexican sweetheart, incongruously both blond and Jewish for purpose of this reverie, ample bosom laden with pistols. “The cities have fallen,” she cries. “They want the mission now.”
|