Wednesday’s NewVerseNews: BLOOM
by Annie Cowell
Songul Yucesoy's home in Samandag, southern Turkey was destroyed when a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck a month ago. —BBC, March 6, 2023
*
She raises soap sudded hands from the washing bowl, places them on her hips and stretches out her aching back. Behind her the house tilts, crippled, less solid than its shadow, window frames sagging between cracks like craters. On the table, rescued, somehow unscathed, is a picture. It is a shell-framed souvenir of life before, when the table wasn’t orphaned to the street. Now, the fruit bowl she hates for its dull colours and chipped rim sits beside the picture, uncomfortable, with its solitary orange. A white mould is beginning to blossom on its skin. She lifts the dying orange, cups it in her hands like a stunned bird and walks the short distance to where her neighbours’ family inhabit two makeshift tents, cobbled together near the rubble of their home. Her daughter’s friend, he of the wild eyes and cheeky tongue, lowers his head as she approaches, tamed and silenced by the shame of survival. The lump in her throat prevents speech, so she dusts the orange bloom with her finger, takes the young boy’s hand places the orange there. Squeezes. It’s the least, and the most, she can do.
*
Author’s note: Some of the events in this poem are imagined, but they were suggested by the facts in the BBC’s March 6 article “Turkey Earthquake: Survivors living in fear on the streets.” The suffering continues, even as the earthquake’s aftermath slips from the headlines.
*
Annie Cowell lives by the sea in Cyprus with her husband and rescue dogs. She has been published by Popshot Quarterly, Gastropoda Lit, The Milk House, and many others. She is a BOTN nominee. Her debut pamphlet Birth Mote(s) was published by Alien Buddha Press in 2022. Splashing Pink from Hedgehog Press is forthcoming later this year. @AnnieCowell3