Piker Press — Weekly Journal of Arts and Literature
April 27, 2026

Guru Uncle

"...In a bout of boyish zeal, I bought you a book..."

*Guru Uncle

In the mausoleum of my mind lives
your camaraderie with crosswords.
In a bout of boyish zeal,
I bought you a book,
It still lies in my library.
Demeanor apart, part of the problem
was with your voice. Gruff. Rough.
Rather scary for a schoolboy.

Once, I collected my courage
and wished," Good night, uncle."
"What's so good about the night?"
You hollered.
Perhaps it was your idea of fun,
but a six-year-old isn't equipped
to understand the intricacy
of such humor.

Guru uncle, when you were alive,
I had no feelings for you.
Yet, your death has affected me,
like no one else I have known.


*Mother's sister's husband. A retired officer of the Indian Navy.
He lived alone in a South Delhi bungalow.
Guru uncle was murdered one morning.
The month isn't essential, nor is the year.
Each morning, somewhere in the world,
someone's Guru uncle gets murdered.







More by Sanjeev Sethi → More poetry → Full issue →
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