Recollection

During my grandmother’s prayers, I would watch

the cracked earth just outside her windowpane, the dust lifting

 

like sermons lost in the dry air. My favorite story

was of the river that once carved through the valley,

 

its body endless, spilling into the fields. Less famous

is how the Big Pharm diverted it, how the heat pressed

 

its lips against the banks until nothing remained

but brittle bones of fish in the silt. And when the sky opened

 

and rain poured over us, my grandmother knelt,

 

cupped her hands, and drank. I wonder if she felt

 

the phantom taste of the old river on her tongue,

if she saw its face in the ripples, its body returning

 

only to disappear again. This is what I thought about

until her prayers ended, when she took my hand,

 

waiting for the soil to soften beneath us,

as birds pecked at the hardened ground.

Fruit trees with green, orange, and red leaves grow in the foreground with mountains and clouds in the distance.

Author: Adegboyega Kayowa

Adegboyega Kayowa is a writer and teacher whose work has appeared in Analog Science Fiction and Fact Magazine, Queen’s Quarterly, Bi+ Lines Anthology and other publications. In addition to her writing, she works as a copy editor. She lives with two German Shepherds and two neurotic cats.

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