Nov 20, 2023

"The Moon" by Mrityunjay Mohan

It is summer. Ice skips into my mouth. Berries hang on the fingers of plants, grains sprout against
 
the toes of the fields. The sun sweats, hangs like the moon at night, half submerged between the
 
clouds, painted into the sky like oil splashed on a wok. Sunlight limns across the windows,
 
shrinks like skin with age, droops like eyes after years of seeing. Speckles of dust glitter the air.
 
Mangoes fall to the ground, children pick it, bite into it, savour the taste like they are checking
 
the quality of the fruit. Their eyes are closed, a warm blush creeping across their cheeks, a smile
 
littering their faces. I want to ask them if it tastes good, but I don't.


 
I am four, younger than the children, alone as a sunflower in the midst of a garden of daisies. The
 
sun sinks into my skin like ice cream on tongue. Mama and papa are both home, quarrelling like
 
squirrels over a nut, them over money matters. I do not interrupt because I don't want to be hurt.


 
The window panes struggle in heat, they hollow out like eyes scooped from the skull, they
 
shudder like they are in fear. I do not ask them why they are struggling, but I put my palm to the
 
glass to comfort them. I want to say something, but I remain quiet.


 
I am packing my clothes into a blue-and-white penguin backpack. Shirts I chose for myself.
 
Pants I fought to buy. The skirt my sister forced me to get. The underwear I use to cover the parts
 
of my body I don't want to see. In the news, someone talks about the declining value of our
 
currency. They talk about politics. I imagine I am in a far away land without worry. Mama and
 
papa hate transgender people. I know because they say so most days. They don't know I am
 
transgender too. I cannot tell them.


 
I zip up the backpack. The sun falls apart, the heat etched on to every crevice of my body like
 
lovers names on a tree trunk, with a heart in between. The morning bleeds into sunset, and then
 
melts into the night. The night is a warning, for what I am not certain of. The moon sinks
 
between clouds, creeps towards the window, lingers like a kiss on the lips. In class, everyone had
 
their first kiss. I didn't because I was a boy that no one knew was a boy. The girl I liked kissed
 
my friend.


 
I take the bag and sneak out the house. Auto rickshaw drivers stare down at me. Almost
 
approach me, but they know better. Four-year-olds don't possess any money. I walk past the
 
temples, past closed shops, and boarded up salons. I leave with only a vague plan. I will find
 
those homes where transgender people live, and ask them to take me in. The night lights up with
 
streetlights that lean towards me like small, floating suns. They walk with me. I fear they will fall
 
on me. I keep my distance.


 
A man approaches me, dressed in white like a sheet of paper. He gives me two bars of chocolate.
 
I don't take it. He takes my hand, walks me back home despite my protests. How much can a
 
four-year-old fight with a man in his 50’s? I don’t know him, but he knows me. The moon
 
follows me home like a devout follower. I feel important when I am followed by the celestial. It
 
is like I am a part of nature.


 
I watch the moon with every step until I reach home. The building looms in the dark like a threat.
 
The man walks to the door, mama comes out when he knocks. Mama thanks the man, takes my
 
hand. Mama says no one searched for me. Mama says she doesn’t know the man. I look at the
 
moon as I am led into the house. It still follows me. I am offered the chocolates again. I refuse. I
 
do not want to eat it. What if it contains poison? The moon winks at me. Glimmers like a chain
 
around the neck. I stare back. I blink. The moon doesn't leave. I close my eyes. And let it
 
disappear.

Mrityunjay is a queer, trans, disabled writer of color. Mrityunjay's work has been published or is forthcoming in The Michigan Quarterly Review, The Indianapolis Review, Oyster River Pages, The Masters Review, and elsewhere. He's been awarded scholarships by Sundance Institute, Tin House, The Common, Frontier Poetry, and elsewhere. He is a Brooklyn Poets Fellow. He's an editor for ANMLY, and he's a reader for the Harvard Review and The Masters Review.

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