Cast away blood

The full moon, on a rainy night,

clings precariously to the flagpole.

The parrot pecks at the light

shed by the moon’s nose-ring, evades

Minakshi’s outstretched hands

and flies away.

Minakshi follows, chasing.

The chill moon drips mistily

upon the stone pavements.

Her feet shudder, her body thrills.

She wipes with her underskirt

the warm blood seeping

against her thighs

and runs.

Through the corridor encircling

the inner shrine, along

the thousand-pillared mandapam

the pet parrot flies,

to the temple’s Golden Lotus Tank,

and settles on the moon

afloat there.

She slips off her underskirt

and rinses it in the tank’s water;

then – an old memory reviving –

spreads out her sari pallu

to catch the fish which gather

around her feet and nibble at her hands,

smelling blood.

Surprised to see

the moon in the tank reddening

slowly, slowly,

the parrot calls out its summons:

Minakshi, Minakshi.