That white boggled eye is on me, the other turned up wrong— a slither poking out from under the lid.
I feel sick.
‘She likes you,’ he says. Her father—drunk and sweaty and drinking more.
The girl punches my shoe, screeches loud like a monkey. I get out a notepad and pen, set them down on the floor and I’m cold now. All the sweat from the long trek to the village is making me cold. I take a sip of butter tea. Hot and salty—the fat stays on my lips, coats my mouth and tongue.
‘She doesn’t speak,’ he says. Her father—sitting cross-legged on the wide wooden boards.
She picks up the pen, scribbles hard packed circles of black lines. She punches my shoe. I turn the page, another fast scribble, another scream. I turn the page.
‘I took her to Thimphu. Two days walk, then the bus. They said take her to Calcutta but I cannot afford it.’
She stops scribbling and there’s that eye again.
‘She has a hole in her heart. She will die and I will cremate her.’
Her face is about as close as it can get to my face now. That eye right in my face.
Look at me. I am here. I’m not dead.
Then she’s gone. Crawls over to her father and plops down in the crook of his cross-legged knee. Like a seat, like a throne, she sits up straight with her arms to the sky.
‘I will cremate her.’
I look down at my shoes. My brand new Colorado Hiking shoes—waterproof, lightweight, good in snow. I didn’t even need to break them in. They were perfect straight out of the box.
3 comments:
I don't care who wrote this. I just love it. Whoever you are, it is lovely.
actually, probaby Anna Krien given that she is such a smart arse. Or maybe even Christopher Currie who is capable of literary greatness.
I'm taking a punt - though I would love to have been the author of this - Favel Parrett (speaking of whom, hallo Mzz Fave)
Post a Comment