Summers in India were full of apples.
Washed, peeled, sliced.
Apple pulps, apple pies, apple juice, apples with cinnamon.
Apples with Kala Namak.*
Moon-shaped apple pieces, turning yellow inside a round tiffin box made of steel.
Those summer nights, humid and crimson, reeked only of the trees that grew beside the city pipes;
Growing rarer by the day and the granite floors, cooler with the looming monsoon.
Summers in India were full of apples.
Washed, peeled, sliced.
Several years of dust have lathered on, the salt in the air grinding between my canines, grudgingly rubbing-in irritation with my nostalgia.
The old Fiat lies wasted, it's beauty lost on the men that drove her in the 90s.
Those men are fast asleep now, their wives fondly reminiscing old errands.
And I wonder where the apples now grow and the itchy chairpai* now resides;
Home is not home, home is not here.
Without those apples washed, peeled and sliced.
Turning back I see you, examining the vast city from your spot on the terrace, old and savaged and dusty.
The cane chair creaks as you collapse into it, your eyebrows still crinkled from the summer heat.
I tell you that summers are different now, without the apples.
I forget;
You taste of rum.
You are the summer now.
*Kala Namak : Black Salt.
*Charpai : Small cot made of coir
P.S: I am heavily inspired by Kamala Das, I know. Maybe it makes me less of a writer but my words are drawn only from 'snippets of trivia and nostalgia'. I cannot write well. I am sorry.
Washed, peeled, sliced.
Apple pulps, apple pies, apple juice, apples with cinnamon.
Apples with Kala Namak.*
Moon-shaped apple pieces, turning yellow inside a round tiffin box made of steel.
Those summer nights, humid and crimson, reeked only of the trees that grew beside the city pipes;
Growing rarer by the day and the granite floors, cooler with the looming monsoon.
Summers in India were full of apples.
Washed, peeled, sliced.
Several years of dust have lathered on, the salt in the air grinding between my canines, grudgingly rubbing-in irritation with my nostalgia.
The old Fiat lies wasted, it's beauty lost on the men that drove her in the 90s.
Those men are fast asleep now, their wives fondly reminiscing old errands.
And I wonder where the apples now grow and the itchy chairpai* now resides;
Home is not home, home is not here.
Without those apples washed, peeled and sliced.
Turning back I see you, examining the vast city from your spot on the terrace, old and savaged and dusty.
The cane chair creaks as you collapse into it, your eyebrows still crinkled from the summer heat.
I tell you that summers are different now, without the apples.
I forget;
You taste of rum.
You are the summer now.
*Kala Namak : Black Salt.
*Charpai : Small cot made of coir
P.S: I am heavily inspired by Kamala Das, I know. Maybe it makes me less of a writer but my words are drawn only from 'snippets of trivia and nostalgia'. I cannot write well. I am sorry.