Old Dhaka

Fakir Mowla
Artwork by Amina
Afterwards she smiles, and asks
'One teaspoon or two?'
while in streets below in the gutters
strands of piss stream
like sunlight
amid glass bottles...

'Such a coarse age nowadays..'
her mother intones
on a big teak-wood bed
like a boat afloat
on a river of opium....

'One,' I say, and stare at the pyramid
of sugar
the grains coarse
as the soles
of her feet....

A tiny bathroom
where she disappears after we
catch our breaths,
a red cement floor, a
tin bucket to hold
the water
the roof
so close...

Downstairs the bottles greenly knock
and Mohammedan Club pennants ripple
black on tenement rooftops
I turn my nose downwind
yes, my zipper is closed.
Thatari Bazar, Shakhari patti, Rishipara, the old Hindu
buildings squat,
knackered, three kitchen stoves to a room...

She had panted, 'Quick, quick,
Mother's in the next room.'
And later fried brinjal
lifting it up, holding it for a moment
poised between white
teeth (sunlight skipping barefoot on spangled fly wings)
then s-i-n-k-s her teeth into turmeric-stained flesh
its juice squirting ssshhhhh
oh the red tongue she had used on me
with the sun hitched at twelve o'clock.
She had giggled
in between the loving: 'She sleeps light
we ought to finish thaka thak fast...'

But no, Mother was dozing
on the shegunkaat -strong bed
dreaming of a blue-bodied muezzin
with a hand-wrought silver paan-bati sinking by her side
so I had paused
(as curses bloomed in Maulvibazar lanes
and Sunni men henna-dyed their hair)
and whispered back, 'Ssshhhhh
it's Friday
don't hurry a good
Muslim on a slow Buriganga ride...'

Fakir Mowla is a writer/translator.