Home, Oven, Second Place Winner in Poetry

    Home, Oven

    by Farah Ghafoor

     

    Your sister is baking — the heavy
    banana and nut moving viscous
    through the hallways for hours.
    The bread rises warm
    and supple until it is split for tea,
    shards of almond peeking out of the crack
    in its chest. It is another evening
    you try to settle into. You carve rubies
    of cold plums, hack at a papaya’s
    womb and slip its black eggs under
    your tongue. Your mother is out
    praying. You think about her hands
    attempting tenderness. You forget about
    the water boiling, the old burns
    on your wrist. Here, the kettle is always
    a child crying. Your sister will throw
    the tougher chunks of dough
    at ducks tomorrow. They will look
    like small boys, flocks of green
    helmets eyeing her wingless
    back. You will hold up the knife,
    and in its white shine, your mother
    will return your gaze. Your sister
    would stroke it and bring it
    to her lip like a flute.