Mahlab by Talin Tahajian

    I stand with Grandmother, rinse
    a dish with warm milk, watch yeast
    froth. She cups flour in her palms,
    presses it into her cuts. Claims
    it clots the blood.

    My father opens the door, throws
    a sack of mahlab to the counter, a bible
    at my back. It breaks skin. Consider
    the mahaleb cherry: thin flesh, bitter
    tissue, harvested for its seed. Consider
    mahlab: ground seed.

    Grandmother picks up the bible,
    does not blink. Knuckles coated
    in starch, she peels off my shirt, feels
    what I cannot hide. Feels ridges.
    She presses flour into the red,
    swears that I will heal. Tells me
    to think of men.

    We watch batter swell. Consider vanilla,
    butter, brandy. Consider whole cloves,
    an egg yolk, a stillborn. We knead dough,
    imagine rebirth.

    Grandmother adds the mahlab, hands
    callused from handling seed, the grit.
    Votch, aghtchig. I want to understand
    the bread, how to rise.

    2014, 1st Place Poetry Winner