Touch is Memory
Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night staggering like an old woman with dementia, tripping over bits of memories:
his calloused hands protruding like wings coil snake-like on the seams of my slip-over curtailing my movement.
Touch has memory;
but this touch is a metaphor for my silence.
I shudder to think
I am to respond to my father’s doctor
groping me in his cabin
as a price for Baba’s well-being.
Now, I wake up
to my midriff stiffening with
acute pain.
The memory of the touch
writhing my gut.
I have carried this long enough
in nightmares and body aches,
in ointments and prayers silently mourning
like the colourless liquid
dripping into Baba’s veins.
He passed away a year later, a relative told me, afflicted by the same disease that infested my father’s lungs.
But there is no relief.
In my mind, that evening
still hangs moist like air heavy on my shoulders;
my chest turning stone
under cold stream.