i wish we cremated you by Gauri Kumbar
- Eidolon Magazine

- Nov 11
- 1 min read
At night, the floor inhales.
The boards swell like ribs,
and beneath, my grandfather twists
a blackened silhouette, spine cracking,
smoke curling from the hollows of his eyes.
We never buried him properly.
Decay claimed him before anyone dared shut his eyes,
so he lay there, staring
through God’s tangled fingers,
screaming until heaven’s iron fist
shuffled him into
a deck of divine rummy.
I wish he had screamed—
to warn us the fire was too fierce,
that this body still hungered for its hours
I watched his skin, dry as aged leather,
flare like my mother’s silk dupatta
as it soared into the flames.
Now he screams.
I hear his ribs rattle, his voice a windstorm,
recounting
the weightless terror
of riding the gale.
We couldn’t keep him.
To grasp him
would be to summon the man
who never refused,
even when seraphs plucked his vocal cords
like taut strings,
and aimed them at me.
I wait for him to leave
ornamented, through the front door,
not dragged in a procession of silent murders.
One night,
I sink beneath the boards
to have and hold.
He circles me,
as if forgetting how our bodies once melded
when he was spit and I was the pew.
Now we lay,
and I feel his heat seep into my bones,
curling through marrow,
lifting me from my skin.
I drape my hands over empty eye sockets,
and he dissolves
like smoke through a keyhole,
leaving me
under my bed,
alone with the scent of fire and leather,
and the echo of a voice
unfamiliar.