New bride, new night

The evening breeze

blows towards the bride

as she takes her leave

on her wedding day.

Her elder sister

pushes her face inside

the purdah, and instructs her

on making love, surrounded

sweetly, by the scent of flowers.

She has riffled in haste

through pages of heavy books

she herself had not known before,

in order to tell her little sister

which days are best for sex,

when she would, most likely, conceive,

what things are haraam,

she tells her about prescribed

post-coital ablutions.

Before her small eyes

suiting her short frame

images intervene:

the affliction of her own life

and the empty routine

of tired, worn out sex.

These she hides within herself.

From time to time

the younger girl, disturbed

by the shameful, falling words,

tries to muzzle them

with her own foolish

self-confidence.

That entire night

the new bride

disentangles her sister’s advice

caught in her dangling ear-drops,

and lays them out carefully

upon the marriage bed.