Grandma Kika says on the phone,
she recently moved.
Why didn’t my dad tell me? Did he finally
move her in with him? Is she home,
away from six barking dogs and
angry footsteps? Is it over
I ask her, Con quien te mudaste? Con mi papá?
She hums a single note. Mmmm.
I can picture her hand pressed to her mouth when she thinks.
No sé, pero esta cama es muy cómoda para nosotros.
My stomach twists inward, reaching for comfort
it will not get because-
She is still at my aunt’s. Crowded by noise and people
who are not patient or kind. I have heard their voices
raise and seen their chests puff in her face. A face
of someone I love. Someone who is my home.
What happened to my home? What did you do?
Who am I talking to? Not her. I cannot blame her.
I know why she left. I spent 16 years sleeping
on her right side before I stopped going.
My mom bought a house, it was an attempt
at our first home after years of sleeping on two couches.
I was 17 I had my own room and slept alone
for the first time. I had a boyfriend. But
where was my home? Not here. She waited for me
until she could not. And then it was her that left.
Pieces of our past scattered in a room
in a house that is not home. Where is my home?
What happened? Who took it from me? Why-
I tell her yes. I’ll stay with her. As if I could.
As if it were a fresh start for the both of us.
Or as if we could start from where we left off.
Like the years never left us.
Like I never left her. Alone, in a bed
big enough for the two of us.
aliah candia
Desesperada
author bio
Aliah Candia es estudiante en su último año en la Universidad de Texas en El Paso. Estudiando Escritura Creativa, ha publicado dos poemas en la revista creativa Windward Review 2022 de la Universidad Texas A&M y presenta el Writer's Theatre en Aaron and George's Film Cafe cada último sábado del mes. Como cronista, Aliah se inspira en sus emociones y curiosidad por la vida, el amor y el anhelo por su pasado.

