By Mandira Pattnaik
It’s like holding hands, and standing on the edge of playa,
ready to take a step, leap and drown in sand.
The rustle of dried weeds on fallow land
is a funeral song
corrupting the silent mourning
for acres of healthy paddy
since dried
for want of rain.
The family of four — chained to hopes, fettered in prayers,
looks to god
on the shimmering shelves of cotton clouds.
Who or why, they
coast across the inverted void
leaving them to
negotiate a ruthless fate?
When the heavens yield, the meadows and
grass are trampled.
All colors are ruined, except a torrent
as white as white as white.
But no one’s left to sigh, marvel at
the shimmer on the pond’s surface
other than a maniac or a fool of a vulture,
mistaking the bones for silvery glitter.
Mandira Pattnaik is an Indian writer and poet. Nominated for awards including the Pushcart, her work has been featured in over a hundred journals. Poems have appeared in Prime Number Magazine, Eclectica, Not Very Quiet, West Trestle Review, The Shore, Thimble and Variant Lit, among others.