Norman Street
The summer air is honeyed and melancholic
but I still wear spring’s perfume; lavender oil in bathwater,
bloated lemons on the riverbed
it is always Sunday
here, on this street
The evening’s sails bloom and furl,
the river tangles itself in the tree-line,
the street is haunted by corpse brides and one real wife —
Inside, my mother stands with bare feet on wooden floors
making stewed plums, heaping the slippery bruises
over beds of cream
I adore her so much that I am supernatural;
I can feel everything she does
Her dreams on this street are shallow rock pools:
she meets a ghost on the mountain, they swim
in the dawn’s golden yolk;
in another she is a black cat and her green eyes
see through time
Watching her skin glow coral-pink, fingers spinning time
into fairy gold,
knees flushed against the riverbed of a sweeter month,
it is difficult to remember that it is her first time in this world, too
Later, when the sky’s golden thread is sewn
in between the houses
and dusk creeps in through an unlocked door
my mother and I, fevered and wriggly,
will whisper our secrets to the bedroom wall
and I tell her about the time
I saw the world for what it is: a maze
with an unspooling thread I was supposed to pull taut
but would let
slip
She is snow, she is Sunday, she is the entire street when she whispers
tie your thread to me
I hold these words in my cheeks like
the plum-stones that we buried in the garden
pushing my tongue against the soft flesh
to bury them deep, deep deeper still
A Thought from December
We have collapsed into this game of hide and seek for
half a decade.
How strange it is, to discover that the epilogue is soft and summered,
your name sitting on my tongue like light on wooden floors.
And the thought is true and unspoken
that I see tiny endings everywhere —
It fell into January, and no one asked if I was ready,
magnolia’s satin tongues will fall in June and the river will flood in July,
I never knew how to watch the seasons change, but
this might be endless —
You, stopping the car to wake me up,
and I, half-awake and shimmered in light,
leaving clues behind on the windowsill of the dream
to find my way back.
Aruna Joy Bhakta (she/her) grew up in Taranaki, and now lives and works in Wellington. She graduated from Te Herenga Waka in 2022 with an Honours Degree in Classical Studies. Her previous work can be found in Starling.