I.
 A mob of women besieges the grocery
 with stove-pipe hats above
 their black and gray braids.
 There on the film screen
 I see you,
 Domitila Chungara.
 A seafoam shawl wraps your round head.
 Wool dresses layer
 your body that is like a clay
 fertility idol.
 Your voice cries with eagle
 in it. Piercing, melancholy woodwind.
 Another chola beats the counter.
 "What shall we feed our husbands?
 The store has no rice, no corn, no beans, no medicine.
 The men get no wages. We feed
 our children broth
 made of ashes.
 When our men come from the mines
 they spit their blood."
 II
 In pink-brown dirt their
 bare brown legs
 stomp to a few brass tones.
 Woven skirts flounce, colorful
 as maps.
 Bonfires climb the tiers of
 the mining camp.
 Night-hidden, boy soldiers climb,
 orange neckerchiefs
 between khaki suits and caps.
 But the same cheekbones
 push like volcanoes under skin.
 They swarm the rows
 of stucco houses with cells
 for every family, a warren
 where soldiers hunt
 men like ground squirrels.
 Shouting and running,
 doors beaten down, twisting human
 forms dragged out to be stilled
 in falling.
 Flush them at one end, boys,
 blow them apart at the other.
 The union siren blinds
 like a naked bulb. Its mechanical
 mouth, a cyclopean witness in hysteria.
 III
 Women keen the corpses.
 Stiff, spattered workclothes.
 Dusty cotton shirts with flesh claws
 at the cuffs.
 That were men.
 That were twelve-year-old sons.
 The siren keens and wails on the
 VW microbus, painted with one
 horizontal and one vertical red stripe,
 a plus sign, a joke.
 Rage blasts for baskets
 lowered to wisk away scarecrows, leaving
 starbursts of red
 on blue stucco walls.
 Starbursts.
 Red flowers of blood.
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