Menu

Sides

by Shwetha Mahendran

Shwetha’s poem depicts an innocent friendship between two children that eventually goes awry due to the socioeconomic cynicism exhibited by a group of adults.

the girl was from the other side
of my apartment’s perimeter. she was taller

by two inches, but my terrace
towered over hers: a thatched roof that surprised me

with its spirited silence beneath
the shadows of my balcony’s balustrade.

shuttlecocks napped on that roof, tired
after message-passing between our racquets

when we were seven; we were alike
as we watched caterpillars crawl

across crescent-bitten leaves; as we
heard the wind wail and wrench apart

Stygian clouds mirroring the tar roads—
they cried pools for our ugly paper boats.

but we were different: her rain-smeared walls
and my refurbished condo, condolences

the calluses on her palms needed, my hands
‘doughy and plump enough to make chapatis’,

like my mom said; her mother and her fishing net
were hostages of Marina’s sea.

but these were just observations of parallel lines
that forsook their apartness

like climbing roses and trellises, until the misters
of the apartment threw together a meeting

with a surfeit of coffee cups and pakoda crumbs
for the maid to clear; the watchmen were

instructed to shut the gates
if ever the kids came to play

from the other side; we were to stay
where we already were.

my balcony  is still a shadow puppeteer
and that roof its stage
but i don’t think there’s anyone home.

Shwetha Mahendran is a student at Loyola-ICAM College of Engineering and Technology, India. She is currently pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Computer Science but wishes to take up her postgraduate education in English Literature. Her interests include speculative fiction, independent films and pop music. 

Read previous post:
Ten Minutes

How does one define the space between friendship and love? In this story by Meera Raja, Vidya wonders what it...

Close