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

Unanchored

"...echoes of childhood on fading winds..."

Unanchored

Roots can rot? you asked,
as we wrought our tiny garden.

Stilts of the screwpine, we stopped that woman
from breaking mother.
How proud I was to guide you
wherever father was missing,
yet our love now withers
on lines drawn by time and authority.

The golden-eagle kite
flutters, too fragile for the mountains,
echoes of childhood
on fading winds of memory.

Perfumes your clients gift
hover like restless shadows,
cheap incense in a hollow hall.

I still hear our songs;
you mute the world.
You own the sea;
my blush of rosacea
roots me home.

In the supermarket, I
share a crumbling smile
with that woman;
she carries a gentleness
mother never did.

Hope that one day you see—
father was never wrong.







More by Amit Parmessur → More poetry → Full issue →
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