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Ada Limón Somewhere outside of Albuquerque, I was all fed up with the stories about your ex girlfriend’s Guess billboard in New York City, and to make matters worse, I had to pee like a racehorse, or like a girl who’d had too much to drink way too far away from home. You stopped at a friend’s body shop to talk about a buddy who was stuck some place in Mexico. You were talking, pulling strings and taking pulls off a brown bottle, and no one told me where the restroom was, so I walked back to where the hot rods were displayed like dogs ready for a fight, baring their grills like teeth. I was hungry, the air smelled like hot gasoline and that sweet carnation smell of oil and coolant. A girl pitbull came and circled me as I circled the cars; she sniffed my ankles like I was her kin or on some kind of rescue mission. You were still talking, not a glance in the direction of me and the bitch working our ways around the souped-up Corvettes and the power tools. The pet was glossy, well cared for, a queen of the car shop, and when she widened her hind legs and squatted to pee all over one of the cars’ dropped canvases. I took it as a challenge. That strong yellow stream seemed to be saying, Girl, no one’s going to tell me when to take a leak, when to bow down, when not to bite. So, right then, in the dim lights of the strange garage, I lifted my skirt and pissed like the hard bitch I was. |
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