If I Die in Juárez
The violins in our home are emptied
 of sound, strings stilled, missing
 fingers. This one can bring a woman down
 to her knees, just to hear again
 its voice, thick as a callus
 from the wooden belly. This one’s strings
 are broken. And another, open,
 is a mouth. I want to kiss
 them as I hurt to be kissed, ruin
 their brittle necks in the husk of my palm,
 my fingers across the bridge, pressing
 chord into chord, that delicate protest—:
 my tongue rowing the frets, and our throats high
 from the silences of keeping.
Copyright Credit: Poem copyright ©2021 by Sasha Pimentel, “If I Die in Juárez” from For Want of Water (Beacon Press, 2021). Poem reprinted by permission of the author and the publisher.


