My older sister Nancy and I walk down the street together. In our hands are plastic grocery bags that smell like shame and old onions. We are going trick-or-treating. I know we're getting too old fo ... [+]
Reina, whose mom is not here, is sorry she didn’t listen. She’s sorry she didn’t listen when they told her not to marry too soon, to go to school instead. Reina, who inherited her mom’s ollas and aching back is still young and smart enough to finish high school because she doesn’t want to spend the rest of her life with the ollas on the stove. She sees the cars, the ones that her husband says are not there. And every time she sees the cars, she feels out of place, like a curse in a cathedral. They’re always waiting, always watching. Hiding in the corners. She, who is scared of nothing except cars with sirens. And husbands. Husbands who don’t see.