Haunted Objects
by Tara Isabel
Zambrano
During the
winter months, Baba would sit on his charpai, a woven bed, cocooned in his
rose-colored rajai. When I'd bring a bucket of hot coals and
place my warm hands on his scrawny beard, the evening glow would descend in his
eyes. He'd describe how Maa made the perfect cow dung cakes and pasted them on
the walls to dry. Sometimes she'd line them up and call it a procession of
stars across the sky. Back then, he'd laugh at her. Now he'd stare at the empty
walls with faded circular markings. I'd watch him grow quiet and anxious, as if
he was at the threshold of solving a mystery. Then he'd allow me to sit by his
side and tell me another story. Our world would rearrange with Maa and a trail
of stars. The arc of moon would rise in the corner of our eyes, and like
haunted objects the wheat fields would go from green to purple and then black
with a swirl of silver around their edges.
* * * * *
"Haunted
Objects" was previously published in Star82*
Review.
More about Tara
Isabel Zombrano at https://taraisabelzambrano.wordpress.com.
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