Masham Means Evening

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Masham Means Evening Page 5

by Kanina Dawson


  far beneath the trees, unseen

  into milkweed-feathered nests.

  Then those blood and rain puddles

  held captive in the craters

  of Kandahar’s shitty main road

  would be far above us, and the mess –

  the asphalt memory of yesterday’s boom

  that got buried in that soldier’s knees and face

  like a shattered dinner plate –

  would be several stratum away,

  mistaken by us in our dry, deep holes

  for nothing more than the rumbling

  of an inconsequential thunder.

  Disconnected

  We drive by the remains of a suicide bomber –

  his hair a bloody ruff held aloft by a policeman.

  He is proud to have found it, like a mutt

  shaking out the prize of his mane.

  I was sunk deep within myself, thinking of my daughter

  swinging her bucket in the rain on the way to the compost heap,

  and me – married, steeped, hip deep in the green fields of home

  when I saw the hole where the bomber’s face should have been.

  Its oval of open bone endings, jaws

  pried apart.

  My heart jolted, involuntary

  as a tongue running over a loose tooth.

  For a moment I was that bloody space –

  that bundle of raw nerves where the air hits and makes pain.

  I thought about how this man was born

  the same as any man I’ve known.

  The policeman grins as we pass,

  shoving the head into a bag, and I am torn

  between worlds –

  my daughter at home in her bare feet, scattering

  eggshells and ash

  and this bombed out vehicle to my right,

  a popping metal fire

  where they keep finding teeth.

  Taliban

  I am one of the faithful. I live among those

  who line their eyes with kohl, who skim the top

  off the opium crop, giggling when we get caught

  behind a compound wall, our pants pulled down,

  a boy in our mouth. I learn what I’ve been taught –

  to sting the invaders until they are stunned.

  It is what God has provisioned.

  Commanders tell us that our past is glorious –

  a blazing line of sacrifice –

  and that our future will be rewarded.

  They tell us war is when we rest in God. But we’re still young.

  Sometimes we quake, our hands shaking in the aftermath.

  We bury what dead we can, stealing their sandals

  then rubbing eggplant on our wounds. Taking opium at noon

  in the secrecy of the vineyard, I numb

  my own fear. When I close my eyes

  I can’t be seen.

  When the shock of war wears off we brag

  about our ability to vanish into villages, silently

  reciting the Arabic history of words we’d never heard

  until Al Qaeda came.

  At night we name the invaders, invoking

  longwinded and passionate phrases

  about how we’ll kill them. When darkness falls

  we huddle up, hungry, holding hands,

  long bones of cold woven within our interrupted sleep.

  In the morning we eat grapes off the ground.

  When the helicopters come we run or lie still –

  anything to avoid their guns. Even in the dark

  they can make your body fly apart, your mouth

  open without sound. The same thing we crave

  for the invaders, may we prick them

  according to what is promised.

  Support is drummed up on the dust of our heels,

  our governance given in the form of ultimatums,

  the blood of teachers, the measurement of beards.

  Shame on you if you’re split between the legs –

  you women, keep your foulness hidden – still,

  your fear is what fascinates. If I got you alone

  I’d jab my fingers into the damp centre of that pain.

  Education is irrelevant. We praise God without it.

  Insist on this so-called right and we’ll marry you

  to dirt. Bloodshed is what sells to the illiterate

  in the marketplaces of Afghanistan. I stroll

  through the city at will, my hands clasped

  behind my back. My newness gone,

  my turban black.

  A Night in Hospital

  A Taliban fighter, staring, drugged,

  dragged wounded from the desert fight,

  hangs his head against the bed and won’t look away.

  He touches himself while I turn my back

  and fake sleep on my side.

  I shut my eyes.

  Drinking is hard. Fluid drips from an IV hooked to my arm.

  Rustle and pump beneath the covers, I hear the Talib

  and his one free hand getting a slow start on himself

  until a medic walks by and yells –

  Knock that shit off.

  Fever comes and goes, then night falls for us all.

  Little Afghan girl in the far corner, caught

  in the same fight as the Taliban, whimpers,

  clutching her stomach wound and donated doll.

  All I have is appendicitis.

  Lying there, feeling dumb, no choice

  but to listen and wait for the medics to come give her another dose,

  I try to steel myself against her voice, thin as soup,

  to keep balanced on the knife edges of sleep.

  But the visuals keep running a loop –

  that Taliban fighter, cuffed one-handed in the bed to my right.

  He fixes my face in his emaciated gaze. Jackknifing

  beneath the sheets, he gets himself off, then drools

  blood into a bucket.

  Ahmadullah’s Toes

  The only tree in the garden of the camp is auditory –

  full of birds, and hot smelling, like geraniums in July.

  It holds my shadow in late afternoon, where I sit

  beneath its latticework of branches.

  I watch the ants criss-cross the bricks at my feet and envy

  their progress – inherent, like pink hitting sky, foretelling night.

  Their march of leaves goes on. Unlike us,

  their reconstruction, unopposed.

  If I stay here long enough the old Afghan gardener smiles

  and brings me grapes.

  I wonder – what does he think I miss the most?

  His youngest boy walks by with a basket of bread,

  bare feet scuffing in the sand and it’s this –

  the togetherness of his little toes,

  the wholeness of his head and little wrist band,

  his heels rough as salt

  that cracks me like a watch face.

  August

  One hand on his head to keep him from sitting up,

  his face flecked with foam – someone else’s.

  One hand on his wrist to keep tabs on his pulse.

  For some reason I strain to hear it, confused

  by the roar of the carrier backed up to the door

  and the shouts and the shit stink

  and the silhouettes of more wounded being brought in.

  He asks – Where’s Brogue? How’s B
rogue?

  His breathing kicks in like a sob. He has half a pant leg

  hanging off and one boot on, dangling,

  his eyes fixed on the ceiling.

  In that moment I can count each of his blinks,

  the slow motion, open-close of his mind

  replaying the whole thing – what he did

  or should have done.

  And I know Brogue’s dead, not five minutes ago.

  Only I don’t tell him – instead I say, pausing,

  that he did everything right.

  Everything.

  So now he knows.

  And this time when I lay my hand on his head

  he doesn’t say a word – not one.

  Naming the Sound that Took His Life

  Ahmadullah.

  Something like the whump of one

  rotor blade, busting air

  or jet afterburner caught

  cupped in the hand

  or cut short, a thunder clap

  asphyxiating

  its own wind.

  Something like stillness in the mouth

  or the spontaneous

  combustion of leaves, a static

  crackle of noise

  that plumbs the deaf

  eardrums like a sun

  burst, blooming.

  Then something like keening,

  the awesome vowel of a mountain cave

  calling and re-calling

  the consonants of birds

  dropped dead from a tree.

  Notes on a Soldier

  Shows me the carpets he bought.

  Shows me his heart, or parts of –

  the parts I haven’t forgotten.

  Admits to a daughter.

  Runs like the wind,

  but doesn’t really bother.

  Likes cats and kicking ass, hates being

  behind the wire.

  Shrugs a lot.

  Displays fake breasts on his desk,

  forgetting I’m there, then says

  the days he’s on a level

  are just luck.

  Car Bomb

  There’s a lock down in the middle of the day,

  out by the arches at the eastern entrance to the city.

  Afghan police receive word

  that a suicide bomber is on his way.

  Now every car left sitting by the side of the road,

  every fruit cart and taxi cab is cause for alarm.

  Backed off a bit in our row of trucks we have a good view.

  There’s not much else we can do.

  The traffic piles up in the heat. Trunks get searched

  and police in bad suits start waving them through.

  We roll in slow, like a bead of sweat. Past the bleating of goats,

  children in the back of a van, their hands

  pressed up against the glass,

  heat smouldering off every hood, cars hemming us in.

  Beneath that hard blue sky – a sweltering

  mile line of taxis that makes us know

  we’ll never know

  which one’s about to go up,

  the one far enough away that we live

  or the one close enough that we don’t feel a thing.

  Burying the Rabbit

  At home her pet bunny dies.

  Here, IEDS are unearthed,

  find after find.

  On the phone I try to talk to her, in between rockets

  and thousands of miles away –

  the connection is terrible. Her sobs

  on delay. I have to keep saying –

  Honey, what did you say?

  What happened to the bunny?

  I hate all this noise. I hate everything

  but her voice.

  She tells me Daddy is helping her

  and hangs up. One hiccup

  caught alone

  at the end of the receiver.

  Market Scarf

  Red like leaves in the fall, you covered me

  on a cot, inside a hot tent like a greenhouse

  that turned sweat into shivers when night came.

  You were that fragment of brick that the sun hits.

  Then after we sent another one of our own

  home in a box and I stayed up at night

  among guys snoring in the dark –

  you covered me as I wrote. And when I ran

  on KAF’s shit-coloured roads. One edge

  wrapped around my mouth like a local

  trying to keep the dust out.

  You were an easy taste to acquire. Fire-coloured,

  an RPG magnet inside the camp’s wire. The guys

  laughed and steered clear, asking –

  weren’t there any others?

  It was hard to let it all go. I wore the smell of this place

  far into your threads so I wouldn’t forget

  the feeling you kept

  on my shoulders at night and how I stayed

  awake until dawn, writing

  metaphors for loss,

  similes for red.

  Rain

  This evening, Afghan guards in their towers

  come down for rain, barefoot like boys

  laughing and throwing their hats,

  rifles slung pointed down,

  hot gravel caught in a downpour

  that sends up dust in waves,

  bathing our feet brown.

  Plastic bags snap, flapping on the wire

  and half-eaten apples get left, abandoned for rain

  along the sandbagged tops of the wall.

  All across the city it pours.

  And me in my room on my last night,

  shaking out my scarves, packing my clothes,

  burning down my stores of brown sugar incense.

  I watch its smoke drift out my door.

  Watch the men out in the compound, laughing,

  as it pours, rain flying up around their feet.

  In my room with the screen door ajar,

  I’m letting all the mosquitoes in,

  staggering wet and dusty-backed,

  incense dwindling

  down to ash.

  Afghanistan, on my last night –

  rain so hard it danced.

  Last Looks

  I’m sitting with my back against a building

  by the runway, kicking at my kit, anti-social as hell.

  The sun is burning circles into my legs. I’m waiting

  to get on the plane. I’m out of here for good.

  I watch a newswoman on the tarmac

  talk to troops about going home, their faces smiling,

  heads nodding. I look away, sad

  that I can’t quite get there.

  Still dwelling on suicide bombers and perfect paper sky,

  this fight, both winnable and un-won,

  the silence of mountains in the distance

  plummeting, indivisible.

  This morning the plane sits ready out on the runway,

  its shadow rippling in the heat, its ramp folded down.

  We head off towards it in single file.

  My lungs go in and out like a last look.

  I try to breathe it all in – all these hard things –

  this detached ache like a paper kite on a cut string.

  I can’t figure out what it is I’ve lost.

  Horizon Pool

  Lounging poolside in Dubai on our way home,

  I watch soldiers swim
ming, sun burnt and laughing

  holding beer above their heads as they wade through the water.

  They make jokes and the talk is mostly of tattoos or booze –

  those nothing-to-lose conversations.

  It’s only later in the afternoon, when everyone is undone

  by heat and the smell of chlorine evaporating on concrete

  that guys on their backs, sweat pearled, smelling of coconut,

  stop talking smack and turn to the one time

  they each though they might die.

  I lie on my stomach beside them. Unrelated families

  at the far end of the pool splash and play. But at our end,

  we are still, listening, each to our own thoughts

  as the quiet fill of water spills from here to there, falling

  off the edges of infinity – from one horizon to the next.

  Masham Means Evening

  Grapevine fires from beyond the hills in Arghandab

  fill the land with smoke. .

  At sunset it comes drifting into camp,

  smelling of pot.

  Somewhere a coalition fire blazes, burning up

  all the best hiding spots –

  another offensive begins.

  It’s the end of the day in Kandahar. At the call to prayer

  women in blue burqas wandering late through the bazaar,

  hasten behind closed doors.

  Wind carries land.

  The sun sets into its own ash

  and a man bikes quickly home.

  Beneath the guard towers

  emblazoned by the last rays of the sun –

  one-eyed dog in a stone filled cemetery

  prowls the pebbled mound of each new grave,

  each one a tiny esker. The dog keeps vigil

  beside the bombed out wreckage of an abandoned tank

  inclined to a bed of rocks burned purple,

  sits hunched on the ridgeline and watches birds circle

  off the southern edge of the world.

  He sleeps when night falls – one-eyed among the dead

  and the stars described in arcs above our heads

  too heavy to hold.

  This is Masham.

  Masham means evening.

  Acknowledgements

 

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