My mother didn't birth me, she said. 'I plucked you from a tree, a Papaya tree', she says.
'It rained torrents that Chait* night, a storm raged, tearing apart all that came its way our hut was blown, everything swept away the tree shuddered, so did the fruits I spent the night clinging to the scarred trunk worried about our next meal, a wild gale, then, bent the Papaya tree I latched on to you while your siblings fell apart. Bursting seedlings over my body. With all my strength, I plucked you the stem and branches bruised my hands and arms streaks of blood trickled and covered your face you had a tender, pale skin.
Can you feel the scar on your forehead ? That's where my silver bracelet was lodged. You weren't ripe, not yet.
Next morning, still trembling, I hid you in the warmth of the last cloth on my body, thereon you slept in my ***** till the first rain of Baisakh**.
Your father, she said, 'had gone seeding the fields'. She said, 'You are the fruit of my labour.'
*the Indian calendar month of March-April ** the Indian calendar month of April-May