The Gypsy Woman of the Cooum |
by Rumjhum Biswas
Skin so slicked down black she could have sprung from the depths of the Cooum— that, what was once river, now uncoils like a snake grown sluggish after gorging on the city's offal.
She walks the streets at dawn singing her leaf rustling song. Her eyes inked out from pots of dead night, blink away invisible spider's webs festooning lamp posts and trees. Her moist medusa-head of hair hisses at the sun. And there is a twist of indecipherable metal at her ankle, the right one with the toes splayed out as if to kiss the road. And then there are her hips grasping the freshly laid day.
They say that she is a thief of many things. They say that the stick in her hand has a magnetic head meant to lift clean our magpie-collection of watches and baubles. They say she takes babies from their cradles and blows spells into them, so they turn out crooked in their hearts or in their hands and legs.
When she stops to eat, her belly-button opens up like a carnivorous flower. The nipples of her generous breasts peep from her blouse like twin frogs in a dark well. And when she is drunk she lugs invisible totems after her. She swings invisible amulets and charms. When she mutters, her night eyes take on the colours of a day broken into a thousand histories.
When she walks by our street, the dogs are unsettled and shy. The crows crouch and bob their heads, beady eyes winking. But the cats hold their tails high. For once the cats walk free.
Note: The Cooum is a refuse choked river that flows through Chennai.
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