Culture & Media
Trouble Down the Road

Trouble Down the Road
At the flat top grill, he was all business,
flung raw eggs dead center into the corned beef
hash like a strapping southpaw.
In the alley, with me, he was all ideas.
Said he’d be leaving soon, had a shot back east—
a tryout for the big leagues.
Said his sister would loan him a Buick convertible,
and he’d fill it with malt beer and tuna.
All he needed was a woman to hold
his cat while he drove.
I like animals, I told him. Then I dropped
my cigarette into the dusty clay,
ground it out, slow,
felt the road under my foot.
Source: Luvina, Issue 57 (December 2009).
Cece Peri’s poems have appeared in journals and magazines, including Luvina: Writers of Los Angeles Issue (University of Guadalajara), Gift of Words: Poems for the Iraqi People, Malpais Review, Speechless the Magazine, and NoirCon 2010 & 2012 (Busted Flush Press). Born and raised in New York City, she has lived in and around Los Angeles since 2003.

-
Latest NewsAugust 11, 2025
Tracking the Chaos of Trump 2.0
-
Striking BackJuly 30, 2025
Private Equity in Hospice Care Spurs Workers to Strike
-
Column - State of InequalityAugust 7, 2025
Health Care CEO Warns of a System on the Brink
-
Latest NewsAugust 1, 2025
Border Patrol and ICE Agents Are Arresting U.S. Citizens in Immigration Raids
-
Latest NewsJuly 25, 2025
Facing a ‘Federal Occupation’: An Interview with Councilmember Ysabel Jurado
-
The SlickAugust 4, 2025
The Oil Wells Near the Denver Suburbs Worried Her. The Health Risk Alarmed Her Even More.
-
Column - State of InequalityAugust 15, 2025
Measles Is Making a Comeback — and California Isn’t Immune
-
The SlickJuly 28, 2025
Trump Administration Moves to Cut Vital Petrochemical Watchdog, Putting Texans and Others at Risk