Lori Romero



EL SANTUARIO DE CHIMAYO       

She travels slightly behind the procession of pilgrims led by the man hoisting a cross.  Her face is nailed shut.  Her contours unreliable in pi�on-filtered light.  Eyes of a weaver, I envy their density.

I want to smooth her bunched coat, her cowlick leafing out like an Easter palm.  Search for stigmata on hands so near to bruising.

I want to sit with her in the Prayer Room, among the discarded crutches and braces, the emptied pockets and handmade shrines.  Allow the perfect sentence to fly away.  Perform penance until wounds remember a rusty shadow, fill receptacles with sacred sand.  Let hours pass until the hawks� pierced cries fall around shoulders.

Once, a ruined night was measured by line static, like the vague babel of bees.  Once, a night nurse wept as she prepared an IV.   Once, a breath was expelled as though through the open mouth of a choir.

Outside the Santuario, a sibilant wind will uncover a garden.  Lavender and anemone.  The blurring of purple and white will call us.

Darkness will evaporate as I reach my hands to her face.


MAKING CANNOLI

Start with a broom stick
cut to the length of mother�s outstretched hand

sand it as smooth as the moves of your aunts
playing penny poker with hoarded coins

mix ricotta with sugar, honey, vanilla, nuts and citrus zest
set aside and steal a sip of anisette

mound flour into a gentle dune
recalling childhood days at the shore

make a well in the center, pour in wine, honey, sugar, salt, and egg
steal another sip of anisette

knead until the dough
is as stiff as your grandmother�s pillowcase

shape the dough into two disks and roll out so thin
you can read your father�s sports section through them

cut the dough, sturdy as a Sicilian widow, into four-inch squares
wrap each square into an overlapping hug around the oiled form

anoint with egg whites to keep them sealed
fry in heated oil until browned like your uncle�s second wife

drain and cool � slide the pastry off the form while warm
spoon ricotta mixture into a pastry bag and fill to overflowing

sprinkle with powered sugar and chopped pistachios
close your eyes and grow small against the prattle of plates.

Lori Romero currently resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  She is co-founder of Cezanne�s Carrot (www.cezannescarrot.org).  Ms. Romero�s chapbook, Wall to Wall, was published by Finishing Line Press.  Her short story, "Strange Saints," was a semifinalist in the Sherwood Anderson Fiction Award and her short screenplay won the Manhattan Short Film Festival�s Scripts and Screenplay Competition.  Her poetry and fiction have been published in more than sixty journals and anthologies, which include Copper Nickel, flashquake, Citizen 32, Quercus Review, Plum Biscuit, Mystic River Review, Edgar Literary Magazine, Poetry Motel, Mobius, Pebble Lake Review, and Mindprints.  She was just nominated for a second Pushcart Prize.









                                    

 

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