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What’s Wrong With Sienna?

You can probably imagine a husband-not-baby say he’s hungry, and the woman-his-wife Sienna hurry and scurry, her hands and fingers and wrists getting busy with kneads and whisks, mammaries leaking, while the baby-from-him sleeps, because Sienna must be efficient like-cattle-like-poultry, like her-mother-Nannima, and all the women-like-her-married-at-seventeen, like Nannima said to her on the wedding day, You need to be as busy as a whirring fan, a good wife to the husband-not-lamb in the decade of the drought, for he reared those lambs on the grasslands-not-green, and those would die before they found butchers, a lucky chance to be wed and fecund, in case there was hailstorm-but-no-rain like all these years, and hunger deaths. Millet flatbreads hot off the fire, not-crisp-not-white spread with pickled radish, while the dry-as-anything not-warm-not-cold wind howls, the baby cries out awake-asleep-unsure, miserable in its damp cot, and a lonely jackal lurks somewhere under the Khejris not-yet-not-wild and waits to take a kill on the single hapless goat tied there outside, in the forlorn yard, and the husband-not-hungry slides-in a singular mandatory question-like-it’s-an-answer between chews, Did you? pointing to the breads, meaning Did you eat?, which is as close to caring-as-in-loving as a man could get, Sienna knows, for she’s seen men as brother-as-father-as-this. When the man-father-husband leaves, the door-pane still swinging, like counting the passing of years-not-wants-not-warmth, she sits by the clay oven, listens to the locusts reaching for the dead crop fields around, listens to her breaths not-moans-now-never, grabs the baby like a pillow-not-him, eases herself and baby like pair of ragdolls, and cuddles the baby until it has found what it seeks in its mouth, and this-girl-woman-mother is not-Sienna, because she has escaped someplace-else, no-not-this, in imagined-leaps-of-wishful-fantasy like-everyday-not-never.    

Mandira Pattnaik is the author of collections Anatomy Of a Storm-Weathered Quaint Townspeople (2022, Fahmidan Publishing), Girls Who Don’t Cry (2023, Alien Buddha Press), and Where We Set Our Easel (forthcoming May 2023, Stanchion Publishing). Mandira’s fiction pieces have appeared in The McNeese Review, Penn Review, Quarterly West, and others. She edits for trampset and Vestal Review. More: mandirapattnaik.com

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