IX, part 6

We bought a small house
along the river, in Southside barrio.
A shack I pried boards from the front door to get in—
half-acre of land in the back
heaped with decades of scrap—rusted wire fencing, creosote
railroad ties, tumbleweeds, a mountain of decaying
harvest never picked, weaving itself
slowly into the dirt again.

             I gutted the plaster frame house,
nailed, puttied, roofed, plumbed,
poured cement, sheet-rocked, tiled, carpeted,
tore-out, re-set,
        piled, burned, cleaned, cemented, installed,
washed and painted,
trimmed, pruned, shoveled, raked,
        sawed, hammered, measured, stuccoed,
until,
        calloused handed, muscle-firmed, sleek hard bodied,
                our small house rose
                from a charred, faded gravemarker,
                a weather-rotted roost
                for junkies and vagrants,

wind, rain, and sun splintered
jagged stories of storms on,
I corrected,
                re-wrote upon
                this plaster wood tablet,
                our own version of love, family and power.