Us by Meg Malachi

Us by Meg Malachi

In between spoonfuls of his wife’s 

homemade rice and pork, Humberto talks about a distant cousin,

a young woman whose father was my grandfather’s third 

cousin—a lanky, white man with green

eyes who hailed from Vega Alta, Puerto Rico.

He pulls up a photo of the woman on his phone 

and figures he ought to explain:

Her father’s some black man. Don’t know his name.

His ancestral, low cheekbones reach

for his eyes, completing a sad 

epigone of a smile,

and with an obvious lump

in his gut, he continues

She’s black, like you. 

 

Humberto’s wife raises her glance 

from her greasy plate.

She stabs her plastic fork into a maduro, 

and halfway between the plate

and her mouth, she says 

Meghan’s not black, though! 

Right, Meghan?

You’re not black,

right?

She chuckles lightly before popping the fat plantain

into her mouth, stunned 

by her husband’s directness. 

My first thought was that she had finally gone mad.

I once overheard my cousin Lorena telling the story

of when Humberto’s wife was a teenager,

how a woman dropped a frying pan on her head

from ten stories up. 

Lorena thinks she’s always been a little off since. 

 

I am wearing the charm bracelet that 

Humberto bought me for my birthday.

He even bought me some charms to start it off. 

It doesn’t match

my gold studded earrings, but my mother says

you should always wear the gifts people buy you

when you know you’re going to see them. 

It lets them know you liked it, even if you don’t. 

 

As Humberto’s wife

stays firm in her invitation, 

watching me with a leer of promise,

I regret wearing a gift

given either out of guilt for who they were

or pity 

for who I was. 

And despite the weight 

of that heavy hunk of metal

on my wrist, 

I cannot align my

self with her apocryphal truth. 

I remind her that my father is black,

therefore so am I. 

 

After taking a sip of OJ, 

she points her lips at the salad bowl 

and hands me a spoon

I did not ask for—

cheap upholstery 

for her stupid, galling words. 

Answering with truth

a question that had no

regard for facts, only choice,

is hardly didactic,

only regrettable. 

 

Humberto is silent, as are his white children—

my white cousins, whom I should hate the most in that moment,

but for whom I endure ruth instead, considering 

the shackles of inheritance.

Inertia outstrips their 

anatomies, and I am certain that I

am alone. 

In the dissatisfied silence that follows,

amid lukewarm fare and pulped juice,

I suffocate my mouth with sour lettuce

and glare at the window, a harbinger

for this flecked, moonless night.

I consider the woman in the photo,

whom I know I’ll never know,

wondering if she’d ever been shown

a photo of me,

wondering if she, too, nourished herself

in outstanding love. 

Bento Box by Emelie Ali

paella by Krystalina Padilla

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