The porch light flickers for thirty-six years. Somewhere a hen claws the dirt, thin legs scrambling to leave a trace. Maybe another girl dances alone in her room. Maybe we curl back our tongues to mimic the red glow beneath the smoke crumbling into a bowl of ash. Call this a prayer, call it a daily grief because we’ve forgotten how to shape the name with our tongues—can only name the man who swallowed your light.So name him. Dew on the sand. Rain on a cloudless day bending every ray of light. Our faces turned away from the sky. Somewhere, a fox celebrates a false marriage where he’ll crawl back into that murky darkness. A tattered pinion: useless. Another name without a body. Another body on the side of the road. Another small girl— maybe you—with black hair, small ears, piercings. This time. Another unheard prayer. Remember how we would hide inside our homes if the sun burned redand the sun burned red every evening, soaking the seam of the sky with blood or something like blood. Even now we ignite the backyard with fluorescent light, sear our eyes with smoke to chase a memory and choke down a shared prayer. The salted fish wrapped in taro leaves, the smoked flesh of pigs—a meal where we can pick the bones clean, bones we can hold in our hands, bones we can bury. Your pictures pasted in every window, every mouth echoing have you seen Diane?A chorus of mouths, of hands, of sockets gaping wide in search of your name and the body that carried it. The unnamed body that carried you away. The tiles stained red with his first hunger. How my mother would quietly call me Rose. Hide me in the girl’s bathroom, too afraid to send me alone but unsure why. How I still scramble for the light switch, clawing the bathroom walls for that plastic reassurance. Wear the remnants of insects and wax smeared across my lips—call this a private prayer.Look at the banyan tree. How it hangs off the sky like a prayer, tied to its host till what it clings to rots away. And what thrives, unnamed inside that hollow: a god, a ghost, everything we’ve buried, where we ache to forget—for rain to come and flood the space between our ribs, or fire to devour it, and us with it. How every evening that flickering light is a kind of yearning. How I imagine at the edge of that yearning youtoe the dim line, afraid to walk into an empty home. Yes, even now I imagine you dancing. How one day we’ll empty ourselves of all our prayers: the lies we untwisted like cellophane wrappers, a handful of feathers, the dim light of incense at the bottom of a bowl. But please, just once more, tell me the name of the song you hummed in my dreams—the one with the bright red apples buried beneath the winter snow. Teach me to sing the song wherethe wind never wept into my hands the name of any girl where the waters could soothe the red glow of our prayers and in that soft silence, somewhere, we could turn off the porch light.
「Obake Obachan」
Diane Yayoe Suzuki disappeared on July 6, 1985.
Feature Date
- January 17, 2023
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Copyright © 2022 by Bret Yamanaka.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Bret Yamanaka (he/him) is a New York based poet and dance artist. His work investigates how language can physically disrupt or invite sensations, and how pressing the body to its extremes can create visceral narratives. His writing has won The Iowa Review Award, The Gearhart Poetry Prize, and he was a 2022 Margins Fellow through the Asian American Writers Workshop. He has performed for Akram Khan, was a Teaching Fellow at The Juilliard School, and currently performs in Punchdrunk’s award winning production Sleep No More.
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