Sosi
A letter came today from our
keri
.
Mama breathes in memories of her brother.
She tucks the sealed envelope into her dress,
where it waits for Papa and my brothers
to join us on the rooftop for lunch.
Millstones grind to stopping.
Papa, Misak, and Kevorg
brush wheat dust from their clothes.
They splash their hands and faces clean.
I tie tight knots of deep red wool
into the pattern growing on my loom.
Shahen tosses Mariam into the sky.
His rhythm, his chant, taking all the air.
A-me-ri-ca,
A-me-ri-ca,
A-me-ri-ca.
When Papa, Misak, and Kevorg sit,
Shahen puts Mariam into my lap.
Mama kisses the letter, hands it back to Papa.
Our twelve eyes rest on him as he reads Keri’s words.
“War has come.
You must go.
You are Christians alone
in the Ottoman center.
At least send Shahen.”
Mama draws a short sharp breath.
Papa’s brow makes one thick line.
Shahen wears a jackal’s grin.
“In America, sons grow tall
like plane trees.
Armen, still in school,
already towers over me.
He speaks English like a prince.
Shahen will do the same here.”
Mama’s face turns to ash.
Shahen’s teeth show through his smile.
“See, Papa. It’s good I should go.”
Water hits the wooden wheel
like the steady beat of a drum.
“There is no reason for war
that reasonable men can’t solve.”
Papa’s words like a melody
blend with the mill stream
till Mama stops the song.
“But can we trust them to be reasonable?”
Papa says,
“I decide who comes and goes.
Your brother is too far to know.”
Papa’s voice is like rough rock.
Shahen swallows back his grin,
but I see his eyes are dancing.
The water on the mill wheel
makes a constant beat.
Calm comes to Papa’s face.
“There is no
them
,
only single souls.
Mustafa.
Kaban.
They would never harm us.
This is our home.”
Shahen’s eyes go to the sky,
his lips pressed tight,
his twisted smile rising.
Inside my ears, I buzz and burn.
Every day with Father Manoog
and still Shahen does not know
that the stones of home
are the warmest.