Watermark Boricua & Broken English

By Sean Carrero

Watermark Boricua

I hear the families drown from here. 
In his slippers and sleepwear full of pride, Papa irons 

my clothes. His body angles over the ironing board 
like an old guy with nothing but his thoughts to give. 

Meanwhile, the day’s last minutes drag like an old 
wooden kitchen chair across a dusty floor: Dusk peers 

over the houses around us until night’s bluest hour matches 
the inside of my eyelids. I cross my fingers and wish 

his god might hear his small prayers, like rain against 
the Cathedral Basilica St. John the Baptist. Homesick 

for an island covered in rain unincorporated, with its sovereignty 
on mute, white as breadfruit, bright as the waves that circle 

the small island, arms folded–– he snores from the couch.
Broken English

With God, a bargain begins begrudgingly. 
Grief never ends; it doesn’t have to stop you. 
I betray the intuition in my bones and I lose 

one breath with each spoken syllable.
My left-hand leads, while my right stops you––
often soft-spoken, calm before a storm 

my landscape broken, nothing but a storm––
I’ve been told more times what to talk about
rather than how to talk my native tongue. 

I’ve been told blood is thicker than water.
I get it. I will eat a plantain and my mouth will water;
eat a plate of rice and beans, food ancestors ate,

speak my father’s native language even though 
he never taught it to me, never had to teach me
that blood is thicker than water. 

Sean Carrero earned his MFA in Creative Writing from the University of New Orleans. He served as a reader for Bayou Magazine and received honorable mention for the Academy of American Poets’ Award. Carrero’s poetry can be found in Angel City Review, Berkeley Poetry Review, and North Dakota Quarterly