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English Pages 58 [68] Year 1986
GIVING UP THE GHOST Teatro in
Two Acts
by Cherrie Moraga
West End Press
Copyright
©
by Cherrie Moraga.
All rights reserved.
part of this book may be performed, recorded, or otherwise transmitted without the permission of the author and the publisher.
No
Giving Up the Ghost was performed in an earlier version as a staged reading at the Foot of the Mountain Theatre of Minneapolis in June 1984. As the work (at publication) has not been produced, stage directions have been kept to a minimum. Those interested in producing Giving Up the Ghost should write the author for permission
through the publisher.
Photo: Annette Pelaez Artistic conception:
Osa Hidalgo de
la
Riva
Cover design: Sherri Holtke
First edition -
ISBN
August, 1986
0-931122-43-0
This project is partially supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
West End Press P.O. Box 291477 Los Angeles, California 90029
Giving
Up
the Gliost
If I
had wings
like
an angel
over these prison walls I
would
fly
(song
my
mother would sing me)
THE CHARACTERS
MARISA
Chicana
CORKY
MARISA's younger
AMALIA THE PEOPLE
Chicana
CORKY is
her
in
her
in
late
20s self,
at 11
born
late 40s,
Those viewing THE
and
17 years old
Mexico
in
PERFORMANCE
"una chaparrita" who acts tough, but has a wide open which betrays the toughness. She dresses in
sincerity in her face
the "cholo style" of her period (the '60s): khakis with razor-sharp creases; pressed white undershirt; hair short and slicked back.
MARISA, over 10 years later, wears her toughness less selfThe sincerity is more consciously a little closer to the bone. guarded. She appears in levis, tennis shoes, and a dark shirt. Her
hair
is
AMALIA
is
short.
"soft" in just the
ways that MARISA
"hard."
is
Her
clothes give the impression of being draped, as opposed to worn. Shawl-over-blouse-over-skirt all of Mexican Indian design. Her
—
hair
is
and worn down about this woman.
long
frivolous
or loosely braided.
There
is
nothing
The STAGE SET should be black with as few props as possible. wooden chairs, for example, should be used to represent 'the street, " a 'bed, 'kitchen, etc. Lighting should be the main feature in providing setting. Throughout the long monologues (unless otherwise stated), the lighting should give the impression that the ACTORS are within hearing range of one another; that THEY in fact know what the other is saying (thinking), even when there is no obvious response from the "listener." Crates, platforms, or simple
'
'
The ACTION
(story)
The year:
East Los Angeles
1980
'
'
'
takes place (not chronologically) over a period
of months.
The place:
' '
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2011
http://www.archive.org/details/givingupghostteaOOmora
ACT ONE LA PACHUCA
Dedicacion
Don't know where this
woman and
I
will find each other again,
hut
I
am
grateful to her
to
something
that feels like a blessing
that I am, in fact,
not trapped
which brings me politics sex.
to the
question of prisons
Music.
Voice from
tlie
dark.
MARISA Fm only telling you
Lights slowly
my
hand.
come up on MARISA downstage
CORKY
PEOPLE.
this to stay
sits
center, facing
back-to-back with MARISA.
SHE
is
yet visible.
But why, cheezus,
Why'd where
I
why me?
hafta get into a situation
all
my
ghosts
always see that
He I
I
come
to visit?
man — thick-skinned,
dark, muscular.
boulder between us. cannot lift him and her, too, carrying him.
He
is
a
is
a ghost, always haunting her
lingering.
MARISA
slowly
exits.
.
.
.
THE not
'60s Chicano-style rock
face
'n' roll
CORKY tough
sometimes
never use
to
it
my
or nut'ing hut can
remind me
'n'
I get
me
calls
feel
there
it
run the pad of my thumb over carry some'ting am sharp secretly
I
who
getting their rented tuxes
up
get all cut
at the
bloody
all
the best part
is
I love that shit!
the chicks
climbing into the ball of the fight
Chuey
dejalo!
leave
him
GUero!
go,
you know how the chicks get
tu sabes all excited
upset
'n'
W stuff
they always pulling on the carnales
'n'
messed up themselves
'n'
nowhere
'cept
looks so like they digging the their dresses ripped here
it's all
like a
movie
'n'
getting
everybody
whole Ving
there
.
.
.
tu sabes
like a
movie
it
weddings
clean color against the white
starched collars
all
turns to
slowly fades out.
pants pocket
always envy those batos
that red
it
no one knows
even pack a blade
I
meaner
get the
I
my mom
a tough cookie
there in
with it" until
(1963)
the smarter I get the older
I
CORKY
can be heard as
THE PEOPLE. SHE "moves
when
I
was a
little
kid I useta love the movies
every Saturday you could find
my
me
there
eyeballs glued to the screen
then during the lOeek
my
friend
Tudy and me
own movies
we'd make up our
one of our favorites was this cowboy one
where we'd be out
in the desert
we'd capture these chicks
'n'
ransom
for
make
hold 'em up
'n'
we'd string 'em
up
'n'
'em take their clothes off
jus' pretend a'course but
it
useta
make me
feel
tough
real
strip
we'd say
to
the wall
all cool-like
funny now when I think about how at the time and a girl but in in
my mind
my mind
I
I
had
was
big
all their
'n'
kinda
an
like
the
way
animal
you
imagining
they got a difemt set of blood vessels
or somet'ing
see
you know?
like
when you mess with
so 'em
tough
freedom
the freedom to really see a girl
little I
'n'
was
a dude
it
don' affect 'em
the
way
like
it
like
you
do
they got a difernt or something
gland system
makes their pain
that
that
cells
more dense
hell I
dunno
but you see I
never could
quite
pull
it
off
always knew deep
down
I
was
a girl
inside
no matter how I tried to
pull the other
off
I
knew
always knew
I
was an animal
cuz
it
Black
hurt
out.
that kicked back
MARISA
is
on top
sitting
of her
"bed" stage
rubbing her
left,
calves.
MARISA
Fm
make no big deal outta this. been avoiding making any deal at all. But when I go to sleep my legs stiffen up on me In
like I
not tryin' to
fact,
they got rocks in them.
mean
No
it.
kinda stretching can release the rock
hardness
ball of
I
I
stretch
got locked
I
my
between
knees
'n'
ankles.
them.
Dig
my bone
Me Fm
duele pero there's no relaxing them.
fingers into the
meat
of the calf to
work
it
out.
forced outta bed with the pain.
me
Marta finds
cruisin' the
house
like a
damn
sleep-walking zombie.
'Tou
can't sleep, Marisa?"
''No,
I
can't,"
I
she
tries.
cry
my
what I know. I'm standing firm on the ground even when
cuz I'm fighting in
legs
Fm
layin'
sideways up in bed cuz
no
Fm
sure to fly away in this anger,
root to
it
at all.
Bottomless.
Bottomless.
What
is
betrayal?
Let
me
It's
about a battle
tell
you about I
it,
it
is
will never
not clean, nothing neat.
win and never stop
fighting.
The dick beats me every
I
know Fm
cuz it's
it's
like
time.
not supposed to be sayin' this
like confession,
cryin'
still
your sins
to a priest
stopped believing was god or god's
And but
you?
still
you long ago
sit-in.
Pues, you aint no soldier of christ,
confessing what long ago you
would be forgiven
hoped
in you, that prison
that passion to beat at their
them
own game.
AMALIA
(entering stage right)
worry about La Pachuca. my nickname for her. I have trouble calling her by her Christian name, Marisa. It's a beautiful name, really, but she defies it at every turn. In fact, I change her name at regular intervals
I
That's
just to stay abreast
with
her.
La quiero mucho. She doesn't always know it, pero hay parte de ella misma que
I I
lo
sabe perfectamente.
worry about La Pachuca. worry what will happen to the beautiful corn she
if it
continues to rain so hard and much.
is
growing
CORKY
(downstage
strip
I
center, sitting)
me
one time Tudy and
did
it
for real
mean
we
been playing these movie capture games
'n!
getting ourselves
I
all
mean we could play
anyway
was
there
'n' all
worked-up
games
these
for days!
this minister 'n' his family
down
the street
they was presbyterians or methodists or something
you know one of those gringo and they had a bunch a kids the oldest
and the I
was named
littlest
mean you
religions
Lisa or something lightweight like that
was about three or
couldn't really complain about Chrissy
cuz she wasn't old enough yet but you
named Chrissy
so
knew
that
to be a
pain in the cola
was coming
me and my sister Patsy all the time how we wemt really christians cuz cath-lics
Lisa'd be hassling tell
us
worshipped the virgin mary or something I
dint
let
we was
this
the one true so I just
W
worry me
too
being tole at school
let
much though cuz how being cath-lic was
numero uno church
the rest of her
that's all they
was
little
all
to
pagan baby brothers
me
as far as I
they dint even have no mass
up on
W
myself be real cool with her
jus'
their altar with a dark suit
'n' sisters
was concerned
some paddy preaching on
very weird not a
damn
dint seem to
candle for miles
me
that there
was any god happening
in that place at all
Tudy and me
so back to
one day Tudy comes up with well
wasn't that hot on the idea but
I
hopping from backyard
we run
then so
how we should
this idea
Tudy
go along with him
backyard looking for prey
to
into Chrissy
me
'n'
still
strip for real
eye each other
'n
figure
she's the perfect victim
for our sick
the trouble
little
fantasies
Fm
is
still
not completely sold on the idea
but Tudy was always too stupid
to pull
off
by himself
up working out the whole damn thing
so I end
the boy lacked imagination
Chrissy
anything
is
hanging out
in
if
you know what
I
mean
her backyard
they have this kinda shed there
with a buncha junk
in
it
that nobody used for nut'ing
so I say to her real simple-minded like
come heeeeere Chrissy we
all
syrupy-mouthed
got something to
well a'course the kid comes cuz I
was a
big kid 'n
shooooow you all
so we take her into the shed
I
have her hand
(as
if
her
"down I
so
I
told her this
we think I
Tudy I
she's got somet'ing
'n'
pull her
think
I
me had little
then her chonas
'n'
then jus' as
we
fuchi fachi
said she to
check
shorts
'n'
10
her
wrong with her
there"
think
'n
tells
suddenly remembering) no
I tell
Tudy
'n
had a coco or somet'ing it
out
down
catch a glimple of her .
.
.
little
was so tender-looking
it
all
pink
then Tudy
goes
'n'
like a
pendejo
sticks his dirty finger
on
it
was burning hot
like it 'n'
sweet
bun
like a 'n'
real
'n'
jus' at that
I see this little
moment
.
.
.
Chrissy-kid look up at
me
like
was her
like I
mom
or something
tu sabes
like
she has this
little kid's
frown on her face
like
like
she knew
something was wrong with what 'n'
was looking
that everything 'n'
regular
what
at
me
was
to reassure
'n'
her
cool
'n! all
a pendeja I felt like
hand away
so I swipe Judy's stupid "let's
we was up
'n'
say
get outta here!"
up her shorts
pull
"no no you're fine there's
whisper
'n'
to
her
really
nothing wrong with you
but don'
tell
nobody we looked
it's
a secret
we
don' want nobody
to
worry
about you"
what 11
else
was
I
supposed
to
say?
to
tonta
(to herself) 'n'
Tudy
W outta
me make
'n
a beeline into the alley
there
coming toward THE PEOPLE) was
(long pause,
the weird thing that after that
I
was
like a
snotty Lisa kept harassing
W jus'
'n' all
things began
going
maniac
me
all
summer
about the virgin mary
in general being a pain in the coolie
to
to their
break
down when me
'n'
Patsy stopped
church meetings on Wednesday nights
we'd only go cuz they had cookies
'n'
treats
after all the bible stuff 'n!
sometimes had arts
little 'n'
'n'
crafts
where you got
to
paint
clay statues of blonde Jesus in a robe
the
little
anyway
children coming to
him
we stopped going was cuz
the reason
one time during these "prayer meetings" they called 'em
where everybody'd stand
in a circle
squeezing hands and each
you know
like for
Patsy and
the starving people in china
me always
jus' shaked
cuz
it
kid'd say a little prayer
passed
our heads no when we got squeezed
was against our
religion 'n' all to
well one time this Lisa punk has the nerve
that Patsy
'n'
(mimicking)
me would "come
to the light
of the one true christian faith" shi-it
'course
12
can you get
we never went
to that?
again
to
pray with them
pray
'member coming home
I
she says
'n'
I
think
'n' it
so
was so
better mi'jitas
nice to hear her voice
she loved us a
like
lot
that night
being cath-lic
warm
real
MARISA I
my mom
you don' go no more"
if
warm
'n'
''it's
telling
'n'
'n'
my mom
felt like
dark
'n'
kind
(long pause)
hate men.
Ya,
I
Like
said
my
it.
roommate, Marta, she said
ironing her blouse for
the one
"You
I
had
know
too yesterday
work
just fixed a hole in,
Marisa,
getting your
it
hands
men
are truly not
worth
dirty/'
them because she jerked one of our co-workers off, just this nobody guy with muscles on the night-shift, literally, with her free hand on her free time and now he thinks he's got something over on her and it was the easiest thing jerking him around. This time she hates
''Men are easy," she says, "always easier than women.'
No
13
challenge to
them
at all.
man woman to want me
I
never wanted to be a
I
only wanted a
And
that bad.
they have, you know, plenty of them,
but there's alwavs that one vou can't pin
down
who's undecided.
My I
mother was
a heterosexual
couldn't save her.
My
failures follow thereafter.
AMALIA I
am
I
see them.
(seated
in
her "kitchen" stage
riglit)
a failure.
Their security.
Their houses.
Their children are happy.
Their dogs.
They
are not un-happy.
Sure they have their struggles, their problemas, but
It's I
a
.
.
life.
always say
"It's
.
a
this.
life."
MARISA Marta bought her mother a house. After the family talked bad about her
Chihuahua with a gavacha she returned cash in hand and bought her mother kinda on the outskirts of town ten grand was all it took, that's nothing here but it did save her mother from the poverty her dead father left behind. Her brother didn't do that. for leaving
La admiro. For the 14
first
time wished
my
father
dead
a casita
so
my mother
could do
I
that kind
of rescue routine.
She, the one
me
said to
I
could never pin down,
very sweetly-like
.
.
.
AMALIA I
feel like the little bird that
in the
palm
of
my hand
was nesting
has flown away.
MARISA That's me, the pajarita with legs like steel planks in (rubbing)
Is
The women
it
I
my
anger that keeps
Fm
in their hatred of
queer
because
My
I
than me,
them.
am. Si soy jota have never ever been crazy about a man. I
friend Sally, the hooker, still
calls herself that
no more, she to
man more
even though she aint doin me the day she decided stop tricking was when once, by accident
she
bed.
have loved the most
have always loved the
even
me
my
bolted to this planet?
it
told
a John made her come. That was strickly forbidden, she explained to me, how her co-workers who were also dykes had this pact.
She'd forgotten to
resist.
To keep business, business.
She had let herself go. It was very wn-professional and dangerous. 15
No, IVe never been in love with a man. I
never understood
women who
were,
although IVe certainly been around
up
to pick
the pieces.
(CORKY approaches MARISA. THEY count off in My sister was in love with my brother.
My My
mother loved her first
woman,
the
father.
man who
put her away.
CORKY The crazy house.
MARISA When come I
I
Camarillo, Califas.
to get
Norma, she has eyes
can see through them
my
my name
face
she says, ''I
How'd you is all
I
am
buddha.''
get those black eyes
wanna know. '(iQuien
1
Black
16
out.
1968.
spinning black and glass
like saucers
am
te pego?''
buddha."
I
unison)
ask.
CORKY
(downstage center)
since that prayer meeting night Lisa had been on the warpath
her nose getting higher
one day Patsy
up on
higher in the air
'n'
her are playing dolls
'n'
the second-story porch of Mrs. Rodriguez' house
was nice up there cuz Mrs. R would let you move the tables 'n' chairs 'n' stuff around so you could really make it like a house if you wanted it
my
sister
had
it
Lisa
had
jus' gotten this nice doll for her birthday
this great curly hair
had only
W only one leg
she'd always hafta to disguise the
mud
wear long dresses on
we
missing leg but
anyway one day into this
kinda stupid doll with plastic
this
painted-on hair
this brat Lisa
all
doll's all
I
mean
I
wanted
so
me
all
like
'n'
but
it's
to this
muddy and
was gone
new
doll
like
crazy
the hair has turned bone straight
punk
Patsy go over
I see
huge ... I
Lisa!
to Lisa's I
mean
her bike which I
house where we find the not even feeling bad
is
really
her tricycle
mean hu-u-uge!
never seen a
don't even think they
trike that big
make
no more babies big enough
17
it
sister's
an arrow!
to kill that
day
my
puddle right down from Mrs. R's porch
pleased with herself
suddenly
it
knew
throws
Patsy comes back into our yard crying
her
to
'em that big no
more
little
creep
useta irritate
it
me
to learn to ride a
so
all
to
no end that she wasn't even trying
two-wheeler
and
of a sudden that bike
conies together in
wimpiness
Lisa's
my mind and
got that t'ing and threw
I
the sucker into the middle of the street
none
I dint
even wreck
but
was the principle
it
the drag 'n'
was
this lady
it
of the t'ing.
a'course she goes
who
by
my mind
she dint wear no makeup 'n'
wore her hair
anyway she has so a'course 'n' 1 tell 'n'
long
all
don' even seem
'n'
was
real
'n'
tied
up
the nerve to call
my mom
me on
calls
her 'bout the doll
Patsy's telling the
she don' really believe
mom
'n
of
dumb bun
her what
tell
know
I
done
the story
the principle of the t'ing
'n'
can see in
'n' I
a
me
'n' tall
some kind
my mom
Pasty
'n'
like
skinny in
on
the carpet wants to
same story I
mom
her
'n' tells
my mom's
eye
did nothing so bad
tells me how she wants to keep peace in the neighborhood we was already getting hassles from some of the paddy neighbors her own kids! about how my mom hollered too much at us kids kids can yell your own who you yell at? can't at I mean if you
but she
cuz
.
but she don'
by the I
let
on that
way my mom
this
is
the reason but
wasn't looking
me
in the face
hafta go over to the minister's house
she jus' kinda turns back
what she was doing
telling
so a'course I go ... I
with no one
18
to
to
the stove
me
'n'
'n
.
could
tell
when she
tells
me
apologize
keeps on with
"dndale mi'ja dinner's almost ready."
remember
watch me
I
.
.
.
.
I
go by myself
to see if I really
do
it
but
my mom knows
'n' I
I will
ring the doorbell
'n!
cuz she
tole
me
to
Mrs. Minister answers
wimp
'n'
as I begin to talk I guess the
little
'n'
runs up behind her mother's
skirt 'n' peeks
from behind
it
ever seen in a person.
all
the while
I
say I'm sorry
as the door shuts in front of
vow
ril
I
never make a mistake
ril
never show anybody
Black
out.
Corky
my
face
like that
how mad
I
can
again
get.
exits.
MARISA I
have a very long memory.
I
try to
I
don't forget
warn people how when
never really I
use
I
blame
for
it
my
it
let
it
go.
against them.
women
for everything,
mistakes
missed opportunities for
19
my
grief.
out at
voice
me
with the ugliest most snottiest shit-eating grin
I'd
'n'
my
hears
I
get hurt,
.
.
.
I
usually leave just before
When
I
feel that rise
up
wanna
I
in
lay a
woman
me,
that vengeance that getting-backness,
muddy
I
run
I
book.
Hop
river.
a train.
Split.
Desert.
AMALIA Desert.
Maybe
Desierto. in the desert,
differently I
it
could have turned out
between La Pachuca and me.
had intended to take her there,
to Mexico.
She would never have gone sin gente
For
some
alone,
alli.
reason,
I
could always picture
her in the desert
amid the mesquite y nopal. Always when I closed my eyes to search it was in the desert where I found her,
but once with eyes open I
actually did see her there,
en
el
desierto
there in the
20
body
of a
little girl.
for her,
flat.
I
was on
traveling
a bus headed south through what turned
from U.S. desert to Mexico, all was Mexico my bones remembered.
but
(sadly) It I
was
to
be
my
some
felt this, for
But there was
my
her head stuck
last trip.
nina,
way out
the
all
drinking in the hot desert
Her
reason, unspeakably.
of the
bus window,
air.
hair
flapping in the
wind
of
it
black and dancing.
She is singing and I am putting La Pachuca's words in her mouth
(AMALIA comes up behind MARISA, wraps her arms around her neck, sings)
"Desierto de Tierra de
la
Sonora
mi memoria''
Sf Sf esas son tu raices
mi
(whispering) Cdntales.
Same
21
Cdntales.
chata face.
Yaqui.
chula.
(almost
like
La luz del
a chant) atardecer.
Las sierras son azules y lloran en esta luz. Hay un silencio que habla de cosas ancianas. Secretos enterrados.
Nada como
mueve,
se yo,
pero todo suspira
"Mi
Mi
chata.
amor/'
MARISA (unmoved)
Fve a
just never believed
woman
man woman
capable of loving a
was capable
of loving a
me.
Some
part of
me
remains amazed
that
Fm
and
that over the years
not the only lesbian in the world
to find
someone
to love
me.
But
I
am
I
can always manage
never satisfied
because there are always those
women
unloved.
I
don't get
I
just feel there is a cruel unfairness
it.
in this world, this division
between love and labor. 22
left,
AMALIA drops her hands from MARISA's shoulders, THE PEOPLE.
coming toward
Long pause
AMALIA IVe only gone crazy over one He was nothing special. Pescador.
man
in
my
life.
Indio.
Worked the same waters his whole life. Once we took a drive out of the small town he and he was like a baby, terrified.
lived in,
Era increible.
Tm and
driving through the mountains he's
squirming in his
'Amalia, Ipa'
seat,
Are you sure you know
donde vamos?
where we're going?'' he kept asking. I was so amused to see this big macho break out into a cold sweat
from going no more than twenty some miles from his home town.
just
Ay
How
I loved that man! what I saw in him, really. still ask myself (pause) He was one of the cleanest people
Pero,
i
Dios!
I
I
had ever met.
Took two, three baths a day. You have to, you know. That part of la costa is like steam baths some seasons. I remember how he'd even put powder in his shorts and under his huevos to keep dry
He was
that clean.
I
always loved knowing that
I
would
23
find
him
when
like a saint.
I
touched him,
somehow.
Pure,
That no matter where he had been or
he would have washed himself
He
always smelled
.
.
.
como
Me volvi loca over this man, When returned home after
for
who he had been with,
me.
flor.
literally.
so
I
many
years, I
had never dreamed (
of falling in love,
too
I
many damn men under
can see them
like so
many love
down
the river
they
.
.
.
call it
was like having sex with children. They rub your chi-chis a little, put their finger in you to get you a then they
|
sacks of potatoes.
To me, each one
making
floating
all
the bridge.
stick
it
little
wet,
in you.
Nada mas. It's all
Un
rio
over in a few minutes.
de cuerpos muertos.
MARISA Sometimes I
see
it
(to I
AMALIA) only see the other river on your
running behind your
Remember
the time
and your eye was I
thought the river
24
face.
eyes.
we woke up
together
bowl of blood. had broken open inside you.
a
AMALIA was crazy about Alejandro. Muy loca. Now I wonder how it was he put up with me. But what I loved was not so much him, I
I
loved his children.
I
loved the part of Mexico that was
the
my home
way he had made Mexico my home
with him,
again.
Los pajaros eran Alejandro. El Alejandro was the birds, the insects that that first summer never bit me.
on the other hand, was not clean, forgot sometimes to wash. Not when I was around others, pero con mi misma, I became like the animals uncombed, el olor del suelo. I,
MARISA remember the story she told me about the village children, they had put a muneca under the door of her casita she had found it there. It was the first time she had appeared
I
how how
mad So, I
to herself.
we
take each other in doses.
learn to swallow
work my
my
fear slowly
desire,
through
the strands of her hair.
25
AMALIA) When I saw the seaweed in long thick strands swaying back and forth a deep blue brown against green ocean and foaming lip of white, (to
I
saw you there
underwater
the seaweed era tu pelo
heavy with movement ola
y piedra
and I nearly lost on the salt cliff that held
But
when
my
balance
me
the fear gripped me, that sharp stab
you get in the pit of your suddenly saw you so different. The hair pulled from your face, the head dangling, suspended. of panic
belly,
I
Bruja, pense. Vieja.
Mala I
if
felt
suerte.
so
ashamed
only in
Can you
my
to see
mind.
forgive
me?
AMALIA
Am
I your confessor? Your priest?
26
you
like that,
MARISA No, in
only that
it's
my
I
had betrayed you
felt I
thoughts.
AMALIA Your thoughts are yours.
They speak mi coraz&n.
of you, not
me
MARISA But then was the beautiful
woman
in the mirror of the water
you or me?
Who Who
do do
I
make
I
see in the ocean of our bed?
love to?
Long pause.
AMALIA (sitting, to THE PEOPLE) When learned of Alejandro's death, I
I
died too, weeks
I
just started
later.
bleeding and the blood wouldn't stop,
not until his ghost had passed through or I
was born
don't
(pause) I
feel
Except since then,
him
don't
until
27
I
me
know which.
every time I
in
living in I
know put
touch he's
my
me la
Marisa
been there
teeth to her flesh.
me
That morning
awoke
I
had come out
It
I
with blood.
and then
looked close
in thick clots that
But
to find the sheets red
in torrents
to a fetus.
had not been pregnant,
my tubes tied for years now. And lying there among the cool dampness felt my womanhood leave me.
of
my own blood,
I
Does
And I
this it
make
sense?
was Alejandro being born
why
can't say exactly
or
how
I
in
me.
knew
this,
except again for the smell, the unmistakable
man
smell of the sex of the as
if
we had
olor estaba
el
alrededor de
just
made
en
el aire
la
love
cama
and coming from "iAy mi Marisa!
my
lips
was
iTe deseo!
his voice
iTe deseo!"
MARISA had been things would If I
man, of been
a
except for one thing
.
a lot simpler .
between
.
she never would of wanted me. I
mean she would
fit
28
me more
of seen
me more and
conveniently into her
life
all,
us,
but she never would
of,
tu sabes
.
.
.
wanted me.
odd being queer. not that you don't want a man, you just don't want a man in a man. You want a man in a woman. The woman-part goes without saying. That's what you always learn to want first. Maybe the first time you see It's It's
your Dad touch your in that
way
CORKY Eeeho!
.
Mom
.
(entering)
remember the
I
my mom
.
first
time
I
got hip
to that!
standing at the stove making chile Colorado or something
she asking
my
dad did he want another
tortilla
" iquieres otro viejo?" she asks
kinda
like she's sorta
tu sabes 'n'
hassled
W being poquita
but she's really digging
he knows
it
and nods
'n'
my
dad
fria
no end
to
comes over
]us' as she
to
him
kinda flipping the tort onto the plate he grabs her
between her step cheeezus! I
I
slides his
'n'
hand up
coulda died!
musta been only 'bout nine or so but
tu sabes
29
the inside of her thigh
that
now
I
know what
it
I
got that tingling
means
.
.
.
CORKY throws chin out to MARISA CORKY exits.
returns
bato-style.
MARISA, amused,
it.
MARISA
(watching
AMALIA)
Cuando Amalia me
AMALIA
(to
dijo
.
.
.
MARISA)
Quitate tus pantalones.
MARISA I
(to
obey and
Me
siento
THE PEOPLE)
slide off
my
pants.
como un joven
lleno de deseo.
The worn denim and metal buttons are cotton and cool ice on my skin. I move on top of her, she wants this and she is full of slips and lace and stockings and yet it is she who's taking me.
AMALIA)
(watching
Hay un hombre en
esa mujer
lo
he sentido
la
miro, haciendo cafe para nosotras
frente a hornilla
pienso t
.
.
.
como puedo ver un hombre en una persona
tan hembra?
El pelo
sus movimientos
30
de una quietud imposible describir voz que me acaricia con cada palabra
la
tan suave, tan
Pienso en mi
rica.
mama.
Habia un hombre en mi
THE PEOPLE) After the last tequila and the
mama
tambien.
(pause, to
first
into the side of her grey face, she
long kiss
warned
.
.
.
AMALIA Don't do that.
I
just can't afford to feel
it
now.
MARISA .
.
.
and
I
wanted
to
plunge
my
hands
opening
into every
her body knew.
But
it's
not the desire for
my
touch which drives
her,
but the need to touch me. "Let's
go home,"
I
say.
(coming toward AMALIA) I
held the moment.
Strained, that at if I
the
if I
looked long and hard enough
woman's hand
full
inside
me
beneath the moon blasting through the window could picture and hold pictured in my mind
31
(MARISA takes AMALIA's hand)
how
that
hand buried
her working
how in
it,
in the
herself, into
wool
everything was changing
my
at that
(to
each
How^ everything was changing both of
Black
End
32
us.
out.
of Act One.
hair
moment
both of us.
MARISA and AMALIA in
of
me
other)
ACT TWO TA SALVADORA
Dedicacion 2
I
have
it
is
my memory
no one can take
the weight in
my
and
my hand
this rock in
is
palm
I still
it
away from me
dense, solid it
cannot fly away
remember
that
woman not
my
savior
but an angel
with wings that did once to
another
self
lift
me
Voices from the dark,
like
a memory.
AMALIA You have the
rest of
your
life
to forgive
me.
MARISA Forgive you for what?
AMALIA My ways.
Music. It is
1969.
CORKY enters
to downstage center, straddling a crate. Something her appearance or style should give the impression that she is now six years older She is slightly more subdued. in
The music gradually subsides.
35
After a pause,
CORKY begins slowly
Got raped
When
I
Taken
me
once.
was a
kid.
was
a long time to say that
what happened,
exactly
hut that was exactly what happened.
Makes you more aware than female, just in case
ever that you are one hunerd percent
you had any doubts
one hunerd percent female whether you act
Y'see I never ever really
let
Not like
other girls
like
men
they was
Yeah, the street
myself think about
even after
the possibility of rape
dint walk
I
it
down
like
it
or not.
it
happened. the street
lurking everywhere every corner to devour you.
was
war zone but
a
for difernt reasons,
Mexicanos sucking their damn
for muggers,
or
it
gringo stupidity, drunks
like old
lips at
you,
garbage sacks
thrown around the
and the rape They wemt
of other
safe
and
women and I
street
the people I loved.
worried each time they
left
the house,
but never never me.
I
guess
If
it
I
never wanted
could happen
to
to believe I
was
me. Yd rather think
like
"unprovoked" sex or something
But
someone took me that bad,
I
if
was
took
But the truth
36
you follow me?
is
...
raped.
I
was
took.
I
it
was something
hell I
else
dunno.
wouldn't really want
to
think
CORKY
begins
to
walk about downstage as she
was about twelve years
I
my
can even see
little
tells
"the
story.'
old,
body back then.
Chaparrita.
We wore
these kind of jumpers, tu sabes, the kind
they always have for cath-lic school.
They looked purty cuz here to I
wasn't too
so
getting chi-chis
'n' all
'n'
eighth grade girls
'n' still
trying
shove 'em into the tops of these jumpers.
Anyway I
we was
shitty on the seventh
big,
in the seventh grade I
would hang
older cousin
was taking me
so I figured
.
.
Can you
to
mend my ways
.
Norma
got straight
As
into her bed by then
that
She'd get really pissed
threatened
was trying
after school 'n' try to be helpful 'n' all to the nuns.
my
guess cuz
'n'
tu sabes, pero the big girls looked te-rri-ble!
to "take it
get to that?
was the way
to go.
when I fucked up in school, away" tu sabes if I dint behave. iQue frial ino?
Anyway Norma was the only one I ever tole about doing it to me 'n' then she took it away for good. whip her butt for that goddamn hubby 'n' kids now
the custodian
I'd still like to
her
'n'
her
puros gavachos
37
little
shi-it
blonde-haired blue-eyed things.
The
oldest
is
a little joto
you ask me.
if
Sure, he's barely four years old, hut
way he goes around primping me to no end. What goes around, comes around.
the
you can already
all
tell
over the place.
Pleases
"Jason," they call him.
No, not "Hason," pero "Jay-sun."
Puro gringo.
Anyzuay
so I
was walking by
Hawk" we
"The
when
this
Sister
called her cuz she
Mary
had a nose
man, a mexicano, motions
who
I'm looking for this girl Rosie
to
So
guy
calls
me
to
They'd do
it
I
dint recognize
'n
stuff I
'n
cuz
if 1
much.
speak Spanish.
muy humilde y
answer, "Si, poquito," which
I
work
to
guess cuz they dint need
the priests dint need to pay 'em
"Senorita Ihablas espanol?" I
him
"por Dios" tu sabes.
So he asks me
'n
inside.
me
me.
to tell
but the parish was always hiring mexicanos
around the grounds
know English
come on
me, "Ven p'aca," he says.
He's about in his late thirties,
to
attitude like one
'n
said she'd meet
cuz she has something "very important" this
Dominic's classroom,
dunno how much
I
todo
alzoays say to strattgers
will be expected of me.
"Ven p'aca," he says otra vez
'n
I
do outta respect
for my primo Enrique cuz he looks alot like him, real neatly dressed. He had work clothes on 'n all I remember but thexj wemt dirty
or wrinkled or nuthin if
like
he'd been workiitg all
they shoulda been
day
but he has this screzvdriver so
I
But
38
figure he must be sojnethiy-ig
in his
hand
legit.
was funny, and
his Spanish
.
.
.
7 couldn't quite
make
which made me
feel
was Mexican
that I
it
out cuz he
mumbled dot
kinda bad about myself tu sabes
understand him that good.
too but couldn't
mostly jus' catch on by his body movements
So, I
what he wants me
He's tryin'
to do.
drawer
to fix this
that's loose in the
Hawk's
desk.
knew already about the drawer cuz she was always bitching 'n' moaning about it getting stuck cuz the bottom kept falling out.
I
So,
he
tells
me
he needs someone
hold the bottom
drawer up so he can screw the sides
of the
which makes sense
me, but the problem
to
in is
.
.
.
don' see no screws.
I
Looked i
to
Que
me
to
like
tonta soy!
But standing
to
damn
the whole
the side, I lean over
and hold the drawer up with
(CORKY
my
me
with
my
asi.
(she demonstrates)
stand
to
it
or not,
'n'
believe
it
or not, this hijo de
behind
my
me on
I
the floor
'n'
my
la
legs apart,
chingada madre
reaches his
arm up
business-like
all
Abrete poco mas, senorita."
"Abrete mas, por favor, las piernas. Still all polite
39
'n'
drawer
legs that I'm straining to keep closed
even though he keeps saying
by
asi, asi."
do
believe
Little
asi.
in front of the
hands holding each side up
'n'
between
"No,
all frustrated-like,
turns out he wants
sits
hand,
demonstrates)
Then he says It
thing was glued together
I no?
little,
'n' like
a pendeja
he gets
my
.
.
.
legs open.
I do.
my
I feel
face getting hotter
wanna
I'm staring straight ahead don'
then worry
how someone would
up between my
legs 'n' then
past the inside of
my
my
thigh
it
my
feel
him
front part.
look at what's
happening
see us like this this guy's
arm
begins to kinda brush
his
arm
then the heat of his skin
that first that
can kinda
'n' I
drawer pressed up against
jiggling the
can
I
'n' I
feel the
keep wishing
hair 'n'
dreading
stupid friend Rosie with her stupid secret might come
The skin the skin
is
so soft I hafta admit
young kinda
.
.
a girl's like
like
think about
I try to
to
.
Norma
'n
kinda pass the time hoping
.
.
.
Norma's shoulder.
her shoulders to
hurry things along
while he keeps saying, "casi thmino, casi tSrmino" 'n' I
keep saying back,
"senor still all
me
tengo que
polite
ir
mi mama me espera"
como mensa
until finally I feel the screwdriver by
then suddenly the tip of is
against the cotton of
"Don't move," he 'n' I
tells
it
my
me.
it
my
leg like ice
feels like to
me
chonas.
His accent gone,
In English.
don:
(SHE moves right down to the center of THE PEOPLE). From then on all I see in my mind's eye were my eyes shut? .
is
this screwdriver he's got in his
yellow
glass
shiny
metal
the kind
40
my
.
.
sweaty palm
handle
father useta use to fix things around the house
by.
remembered how
help
I'd
him
how
he'd take
'n' I
kept getting
him confused
my
kept imagining
with
me on
father
his jobs with
him
my mind
in
man
this
'n'
his
arm
him my father returned
come hack the
arm was
hielo I
wanted
cuz
.
.
.
ice
cry "papa papa"
to
knew
I
hut this other thing
so soft
hielo
then
'n'
musta done something
I
I started
real
wrong
crying for real to get
myself
in this mess.
I figure he's
gonna shove the damn thing up me
he's trying to get
my
chonas down
"por favor senor no please don' hut
can hear
I
my
'n' I
jus' keep saying
"
voice through
my own
ears
way around one I know
not from the inside out hut the other 'n' I
know
I'm not fighting this
I
don' even sound convinced.
"
IDonde
"idonde
'stds
my mind
man answering
soy tu papa."
this gives
'n'
keep running through
'stas?"
"aqui estoy.
me
permission
go 'head
to
not hafta fight.
to
By
the time he gets
suddenly
like I
my
feel like
heen exposed
my to
the air
thing kinda not attached
wounded
41
chonas down
hird.
to
my
knees
I'm walking on air
flapping in the wind a
I
finally I imagine the
'n'
I
papa?"
like I
to
like a hird
have no kneecaps
no hody
Fm
relieved
when
only worry
who
hear the metal drop
I
will see
me
to
the floor
doing this?
get-this-over-with-get-this-over-with
W
he does gracias a dios bringing his hand up
me down
bringing
linoleum floor the smell of
Y
ya
wax
'stoy lista for
"open your legs"
me
me dip
otra vez
resignation
feels
the most natural thing in the world
give in
'n' I
open
for the in his
my
legs
wide wide open
angry animal that springs outta the opening pants
so I can
Then he
'n
go back
hit
me
all I
to
wanna do
with
what was supposed 1
remembered had 'n
forbidden
have
'n
it
over
a kid again.
it
that
once wet
is
being myself
into
to be a
'n'
''Only with you, Corky."
hole
Norma had found showed me too
to be
cuz
how wide 'n deep like a cueva hers got when she wanted it to only with me she said (pause)
42
for
feels
what to
what long ago waited
do cuz I'm not useta fighting
'n' I
what
like
polish.
was no surprise
there
like
earth
to
cold
it
But with
one
this
was no hole
there
to make it saw myself down
he had 'n' I
there like a face
with no opening a face with no features
no eyes no nose no mouth only
little lines
where they shoulda been
so I dint cry
I
never cried as he shoved the thing
into
what was supposed
to be a
mouth
with no teeth with no hate
with no voice only a hole.
A
Hole!
(gritando)
HE MADE ME A HOLE! Black
out.
MARISA
(upstage, after a pause)
I
don't regret
I
don't regret nuthin.
He
me
only convinced
From an being a I
it.
early age
woman
.
only got a head
.
start
after
I
43
to live
name. with
it,
.
then, years later got to be with
admired how
my own
you learn
And I
of
their
over some.
some other men, things had no opening.
only a tiny tiny pinhole dot to pee from, to come from. I
thought
.
.
how
.
lucky they were
that they could release all
that pent-up shit
all
that stuff,
from the day
through a hole that
nobody
MARISA
turns
.
.
.
could get
into.
away from THE PEOPLE and slowly
Silence.
AMALIA En
la
Zona Rosa, the sky remains pink
in night
My I
link
in light
life.
novio from
my arm
(begins
We
(entering "the street" downstage)
to
many
years ago
is
beside me.
into his.
walk as
if
with a "partner")
have found each other once again
in the country of our birth.
Somos mexicanos
still
returning.
am pleased that we have run into each other no need to explain what kind of almas perdidas somos. I
At
least,
no need
44
tonight to explain.
exits.
Carlos
cardboard,
is
not because he has no feeling,
but to
no
attribute
I
may
feeling to him.
His eyes
bleed in their want
know, sorrow
to see
me
suffer so.
am
shocked it is so visible on pero no puedo sentirlo. No puedo. I
But we walk together arm with the generosity of old
He
memoria de
la
will return the
skin
arm
in
lovers.
me and I beneath my
asks nothing of
the cobblestones la
my
pray feet
piedra abajo
life
to
me
(pause)
but
So
lost this
life,
man.
this
Ya
have already
I
me I
abandone.
stop
him
in the
middle
of
our walk,
grab his two hands in mine,
make love to me way he knows how.
and ask him the best
He I
is
a beautiful passionate
can see
muy
45
to
this
on the screen
mexicano.
man,
really.
of his face,
He was my this
makes
first
both of us,
.
.
and
it
is
true
older now,
.
y maduro
gris
ground
like this
latino lover
a difference
that
weeps
beneath these buildings,
campo
fragil
con memoria tan violente que podrfa destruir todos de estos edificios. U.S. Embassy. Banco Serfin. Cocktail lounge. Curio shop.
"Regresare.''
La Tierra nos recuerda.
''Regresare.''
Nos promete.
When
they "discovered" El Templo Mayor
beneath the walls of this city, they had not realized that it was she who discovered them. Nothing remains buried forever.
Not even memory. even memory.
Especially, not
Pero, Carlos
Carlos takes I
credit
.
.
.
me
back
him with
a
to
my
hotel room.
power only
his race
remembers.
In spite of himself, todavia lo tiene.
La Raza recuerda.
He He
is
a
good
takes
me
I
lover,
we
into his
which mexicanos
enter our
arms
.
.
first
are likely to do.
the ritual of the unveiling.
46
.
bed confidently. with his clothes on
We
love
He
already stirring beneath
is
the flannel of his professor's pants.
He
a
is still
boy
after
all.
Me encanta for his sake. Men go from boys to viejos I
wonder
for a
moment
.
.
.
.
.
.
todavia es chavo.
what moves him?
La memoria? La nostalgia para nuestra juventud? i La esperanza para alguna mujer magia que lo puede salvar de su propia vergUenza? i
i
We
take to
bed the gavacha wife
the twenty-five-year-old marriage.
What breed For a I
of
man we
moment, he
produce!
is like
my
son and
Men
go from boys
(sighing)
fear
to viejos
so soon.
I
don't stop thinking of the wife.
I
offer to her
my I
I
should have taken better care with him.
through his hungry rose mouth pezones, withered as they are.
them someone
offer
that
might keep watch continue dreaming that our mouths and tongues and enflaming nerves can cleanse us of our feelings, our shame.
47
me, 'Te quiero, Amalia.
Carlos
tells
Todavia
Siempre
And
I
te quiero. te querre/'
know he
is
not lying,
only dreaming.
how I wish I remembered how to dream this way! Ay,
(long pause)
Voice from the dark,
like
a memory.
MARISA rU keep driving
AMALIA You want
MARISA
if
you promise not
(onstage)
me
to stop
touching you?
(from the dark)
No. If
48
you promise
not to stop.
to stop
touching me.
J
AMALIA (long pause)
was concerned about was getting my health back was not so much that I had been sick,
All
It
I
only
I
together.
lacked energy.
Possibly
but the
it
was the
women
in
coming on,
''change''
my
familia did not
go through the "change" so
I
young ...
I,
thought, maybe
not even
it
fifty.
was the American
influence
that causes the blood to be sucked dry from you so early.
Nothing was wrong with me, really. My bones ached. That was it. I needed rest.
Nothing Mexico couldn't
cure,
I
thought.
(starts to exit)
MARISA (sitting
on
tlie
"cliff")
For the whole summer,
I
watched the people
in bright-colored sails over the califas sea
waiting for her.
49
fly
(AMALIA stops suddenly as watches MARISA)
if
hearing
this for the first time, turns,
MARISA
(to THE PEOPLE) Red and gold and blue striped wings with black
letters
blazing the sky.
sandy
Lifting off the
cliffs,
dangling gringo
Always imagined myself up there
in their place,
flying for real
never coming back
down
to earth
leaving
my body behind.
One morning
I
awoke
to find a bird
dead on the beach. I
knew
it
wasn't a rock because
it
was
light
enough to roll with the tide. I saw this from a distance.
Later that day, they found a
dead there
Una
at
the very
same
woman spot,
I
swear.
viejita.
A
crowd gathered 'round her as a young man in a blue swimsuit tried to spoon the sand from her throat with his
finger.
Putting his breath to her was too
50
legs.
late.
I
know
but I
I
it's
crazy to say
.
.
.
have never seen a dead person.
mean
... a
live
one, just recently dead.
She was so very very grey and wet, gris y mojada
como
arena.
la
She was I
could
How
Mexican by her house dress. she drown? a
tell
did
(looking to
Then
I
AMALIA)
remembered what Amalia had
about omens. I
stopped going
waiting.
51
told
me
AM ALIA (pause)
You and
MAR ISA)
(to
had
I
dream once
a
.
.
.
Chata, were indias, baking something
I,
maybe bread, maybe clay pots on a wide expanse of beach.
We
were very happy.
And
then
.
.
The mood
suddenly
.
.
.
the
.
dream changes.
dark, clouded.
is
I
am
I
remember being crouched down
in
my
hut
.
.
alone.
.
In our village, something
some
And
I
who
.
in terror.
(remembering)
That was
it.
everyone, in fear for their lives
me am
is
Let
in!
homes. a furious pounding
to their
Suddenly, there ''Let
.
taboo had been broken.
terrible
had returned
But
.
unable
me to
And it move when I in!''
is
at
my
door.
your voice, Chatita.
realize
it is
you
has gone against the code del pueblo.
Funny ... I was not afraid of being punished. I was not afraid the gods would enact their wrath against our pueblo for the breaking of the taboo. It
was merely
And
if
then,
.
what
.
.
that the taboo
.
.
else?
What was there to hold to? What immovable truths were 52
.
.
.
could be broken.
law nearly transcribed in blood
this
could go
.
left?
j "
Silence.
AMALIA and MARISA look directly at each other, sustain
AMALIA
I
think, with
that she only
so
much
that she
THE PEOPLE)
(to
Sometimes a
it.
wanted
me
to feel herself
woman
would no longer be hungry
for one.
Pero, siempre tiene hambre. Siempre tiene pena.
(pause)
Black out
Long pause. As lights gradually come up on her "bed," rubbing her calves. I
woke up
this
Sometimes I
Fm
wake instead
again,
MARISA appears
morning the same way I have for months. so mad, I can't even hear the birds outside my window. to this fluttering inside
my
chest
this heat
wings of birds are batting up a war dance stomping out a fire in there.
like the
(pause)
I
still
wake up imagining touching her
waiting to be touched.
53
.
.
.
(pause)
must admit,
wanted to save her. whole truth of the story. And the problem is sometimes I actually believed could and I sometimes she did, too. She'd look at me that way, you know, with hope in her eyes and it would light up her whole face I
I
That's probably the
.
.
.
.
especially
Sometimes but usually
when we made
that look I
.
.
love.
would make me very nervous
tried to look past
it
tried to get to the heart of the matter of
what we were doing and not get what we were doing.
all
locked
up
thinking about
Thinking always made
When I
me
nervous and her scared.
she wasn't thinking, she'd come to me,
on wheels! open the door and find her
swear, like heat
I'd
there,
wet
from the outta-nowhere June rains and without her even opening her mouth I knew what she had come for.
I
never
knew when
to expect her this
way
just like the rains
never ever
only
54
when
when
I
wanted
she decided.
it
asked for
it
begged
for
it
down and wide open
But she would lay herself like I
woman
no
think
Some
it
was
for
me
Td ever had before.
in the quality of her skin.
people, you know, their skin
is like
a covering.
They're supposed to be showing you something
when
the clothes
but nothing
They
fall
is lost
.
just don' give
Pero Amalia
.
She was never
.
.
heap around your four ankles, you know what I mean?
into a .
.
up nuthin.
Eeeholay!
fully
naked
me,
in front of
always had to keep some piece of clothing on
.
.
.
a shirt or
something always wrapped up around her
her arms
all
outta
and
it
but she'd never want
What she
flying
all
it
the
did reveal, however
.
.
.
way
.
.
off.
.
each item of clothing removed was a I
gift,
swear, a small offering
a suggestion of
all
that could be lost
and found
in
our making love
together. It
was
like
she was saying to me,
^y tu?
down my ^Que me
and
give her the
'I'll
lay
I'd
underslip,
mi amor
palm
of
my hand
risk.
Everything took time
and
55
painstaking.
.
.
vas a dar?"
the spot she had just exposed.
Everything was a
.
.
.
.
was slow
to
warm
throat,
Ill
never forget after the
I felt
.
.
mucho
.
and she
me
says to
AMALIA You make
first
time
we made
orgullo y todo de eso .
.
me
.
.
love
like a
good lover
.
(from the dark,
love to
.
a
like
like
memory)
worship.
MARISA and I nearly died, it was so powerful what she was saying. And I wanted to say but didn't "Sf. La mujer es mi religion." .
(to herself)
.
.
only sex coulda saved us.
If
You know sometimes when me and her was in the
middle of
it,
making love Fd look up at her face, kinda grey from being indoors so much in that cave of a house .
.
.
she lived
But
when we were
this real like
deep color
together, I'd see
of
brown and
she was cookin inside
(remembering)
Kind.
.
.
it
change, turn
olive
.
tan linda.
Very very very kind
to
me
to herself
to the
pinche planet
and Fd watch it move from outside the house where that crazy espfritu of hers had been out makin
56
in.
tracks.
Yd watch it come inside through the door watch it travel all through her own private miseries and settle itself finally right there in the room with This bed. (she pounds it)
us.
This fucking dreary season.
This cement
city.
With us. With me.
No
part of her begging to get outta this.
Have
And
it
I
over.
could
Waiting.
Forget.
feel all the parts of
Held.
her
move
into operation.
Suspended.
me to put my mouth to her knew she knew we would find her como fuego
Praying for
and
I
hot hot hot mojada mi mujer
and she could be mi muchachita y mi mujer en el mismo momento and just as I pressed my mouth to her, Fd think I
could save your
It's
.
.
life.
not often you get to see people that
way
puss and glory love them.
in all their
and still It makes you feel so good, like your hands are weapons of war and as they move up into el coraz&n de you are making her body remember
57
esta
mujer
.
it
didn't hafta
It
was not
be that hurt,
that
all
with the
me
entiendes?
natural or right
that she got beat
and
i
down
damn
so
hard
those crimes had nothing to do
girl
she once was two, three, four
decades ago.
like
It's
making
each time if I
must.
If I
must,
I
am
so
I
all
I
from scratch over again with strangers familia
.
.
.
will.
preparing myself for the worst, cling to her in
my
heart,
my daydream with pencil when put my fingers to my own
in
my
mouth,
I
forgotten places.
MARISA
slowly rises
Music.
End Fin.
58
of Act Two.
and
exits.
The
lights
fade out
in silence.
Drama/Womens Studies/Chicano
Studies
$5.95
"An emotionally haunting encounter that asks us as women to look back over our shoulders and face the unforgettable Cherrie Moraga drums up the pulse of the past in all of us."
Angela Y Davis
"Melding desire and memory into haunting new vistas and images, GIVING UP THE GHOST is deeply felt potent and compelling. Cherrie Moraga is an incandescent new voice in Chicana/o literature."
Tomds Ybarra-Frausto Stanford University
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