
"Yes, I'm a poet, but how did you know?"
"Brígida told me about you."
Brígida, the waitress!
"And what did she tell you?" I asked, not daring to use the informal tú with her yet.
"That you wrote some very pretty poems."
"There's no way she could know that. She's never read any of my work," I said, blushing a little, but increasingly satisfied by the turn the conversation was taking. It also occurred to me that Brígida might have read some of my poems-over my shoulder! That I didn't like so much.
The waitress (her name was Rosario) asked me to do her a favor. I should have said, "It depends," as my uncle had taught me (to the point of exhaustion), but that's not the way I am. All right, then, I said, what?
"I'd like you to write me a poem," she said.
"Consider it done. One of these days I promise you I will," I said, using tú with her for the first time and finally getting up the courage to order another tequila.
"It's on me," she said. "But you have to write it now."
I tried to explain you can't just write a poem that way, on the spot.
"Anyway, what's the hurry?"
Her explanation was somewhat vague; it seemed to involve a promise made to the Virgen de Guadalupe, something to do with the health of someone, a very dear and longed-for family member who had disappeared and come back again.
