walking the seawall. a figure walks toward me
balanced on the gray
boundary, she steps into focus and we cross
parallels, i recognize her from the flight. she mirrors me
our echoing accents, our doppled displacement, our winter
attuned, pitched in our greeting
homing,
we meet in airports, on outskirts
along the seam between worlds
she is my context
returning after 30 years, and i am hers
at 39 visiting for the first time. my aunt saunters over
& we three become a nation: black, mixed, indian
without a flag to wave, without an anthem, foreign attrition
we rationalize distance: family, job, money, the voylence after sundown
overgrown, trash-strewn
words freighted with estrangement and guilt, we toss them out
and burn them between us. smoke
of our emigrant ceremony, our crossing of pasts, we depart
opposite, along the sentence that encircles the world
Excerpted from Magnetic Equator by Kaie Kellough. Copyright © 2019 Kaie Kellough. Published by McClelland & Stewart, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited. Reproduced by arrangement with the Publisher. All rights reserved.