Fences
By Pat Mora
Mouths full of laughter,
 the turistas come to the tall hotel
 with suitcases full of dollars.
 Every morning my brother makes
 the cool beach new for them.
 With a wooden board he smooths
 away all footprints.
 I peek through the cactus fence
 and watch the women rub oil
 sweeter than honey into their arms and legs
 while their children jump waves
 or sip drinks from long straws,
 coconut white, mango yellow.
 Once my little sister
 ran barefoot across the hot sand
 for a taste.
 My mother roared like the ocean,
 “No. No. It’s their beach.
 It’s their beach.”
Copyright Credit: Poem copyright ©1991 by Pat Mora, whose most recent book of poetry is “Adobe Odes,” University of Arizona Press, 2007. Poem reprinted from “Communion,” Arte Publico Press, University of Houston, 1991, by permission of the writer and publisher.


