New Delhi
by Sally R. Simon
Curry and cardamom combine, a sea of cilia ripple the scent landing it full
stop. Men with heads wrapped in tangerine and scarlet scarves offer Masala chai
in miniature glasses as if they want to fill me with liquid spice, birth
memories in me so I’ll return, swallow to a distant land. Hijab-cloaked women
avoid my stare, reject my presence as if I’ll rub off. Men sitting cross-legged
hawk their wares, eyeing a lone woman wandering down dirt drenched alleys. Oxen
plod on cobblestone, dragging wooden carts flowing with okra and onion,
almond-skinned teenagers dance abreast to keep pace. I watch women pray to
elephant gods I do not know. I wonder how their breath can be my breath, their
sky my sky. I want to press my palms together and mirror them, but my heaven is
hollow. I want to saturate myself like a cloud, cradle the moisture before it
morphs into rain. I am a drop of water clinging to a glass on a sultry summer
day that lingers before it slides to the surface and makes a ring that someone
wipes away.
* * * *
Sally
R. Simon is a retired teacher living in the Catskills of New York State. Her
work has appeared or is forthcoming in Prime Number Magazine, Truffles
Literary Magazine and Adelaide Literary Magazine. She’s also
been known to write a play or two. When not writing, she’s either traveling the
world or stabbing people with her epee. Read more at www.sallysimonwriter.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment