Yakshini by Smitha Sehgal
By the third day, we reached the long end of our patience and silken desire.
Yakshini
Grandmother forbade menstruating women of our family from stepping out after dark. On the first day, we picked nits and lice, oiled and combed each other’s hair, braiding it into dangling ropes. On the second day, we embroidered hibiscus flowers inside tight wooden frames. By the third day, we reached the long end of our patience and silken desire. We knew ways to open the latch noiselessly and leave rose teakwood doors to the courtyard open at dusk to hear the white owl flap its wings into the arc of time, to inhale the scent of night-blooming jasmine opening to the stained moon. Let the flickering lamp die out early. In the sound of anklets closing in, it was not often that someone arrived smelling of sandalwood and myrrh. It wasn’t often that we sipped palm toddy or tasted hemp leaves. Long afterwards, in the luminous stillness of dawn, the wind circling nutmeg trees gathered shadows of terracotta figurines we knew from the textbooks of ancient history of our burial grounds, curvature of their waists, fullness of breasts and lips much like ours, in the rippling waters of moss-grown, abandoned stone well.
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One of my favorite poems, EVER. It has narrative, gorgeous images, and introduces me to another world.
I really like that this is so much about smell and the senses. Beautiful.