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Mango Man By Cristina Querrer I remembered the vendor who pushed his squeaky cart of sweet corn, sugarcane, and mangos in the sweltering afternoons, through residential subdivisions of my past. And as a child chased him down, with my only peso in hand, anxious to fulfill that nameless need in my early dawn. Just as if the sky turned the colors of burnt orange and the world smelled of incense and my grandmother's coconut oil, I walked this path before with many faces of my soul. Thus, I returned here with the same perplexities-- gastric questions that bubble inside, back pains of my former loss. My mother will one day look on smiling, finally at rest in her hammock contented for once about the heat, as I will hear again that mango man call out the objects of my affection. One day pockets will overflow with pesos and I will never rummage through that garbage pile of pits, memory. Just as if the Bataan Death March of my life took me down corridors of my realities separating me from my husk-- it is here that I am still eased by visions of water buffaloes and rice patties, fish set out to dry in the tangerine sun, and the store owner sleeping with the fly swatter in his hand. Something unexplainable ferments, something in my sultry past falls short, and far beyond my torturous initiation to salaciousness; Yes, my first lover experienced me here. A foreigner himself. A part of that melding masses of ants crawling into the crevices of the cabarets of go-go girls and GIs, San Miguel beer, and rotting mango seeds. |
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Document last modified on: 01/23/2000