Brown Girl Bride
By Nahyian Elias
(After Sylvia Plath)
Brown pulled-back skin,
skin on smoldering skin
red saris, they tell you,
parties of turmeric are in
and gold adornments in glitter,
glitz and glimmer.
I am not a bride but a prize
a prize for his eyes
do I drip rubies, blood?
Bite my already red tongue
like they say I should?
Palms upright, woody scent
mehendi1 dances paisley
up my arms covering scars
on the wrist and fragments
of a gruesome tale–
a rose, an anklet, a veil.
I will never reveal
to him how it felt to cut into
my own body.
To bleed at thirteen
on purpose, somewhere
that was not between my legs.
I will never be real.
I do not choose. I wait.
At five, my mother dressed me
like a bride, like a fever dream
like the lehengas2 I eventually
outgrow, year after year, falling
apart at the seams
when I talk she doesn’t seem
to hear. My body grows, and grows
until it can’t anymore.
Boys notice. Did you think
I would be able to stop it?
did you think, ma,
that my body would be
his prize at twenty-five
that I would disguise–
not even Eve could resist
pooling into the serpent’s eyes.
I don’t care for paradise.
There is nothing there
no smoke in the air
and if I can’t have it here,
what makes you think
I can have it up there?
As far as I am aware
crimson spotted silk, gold lace
this place, this space
this wretched rotted place
this smile, these arms
and ankles, henna markings.
My mother yells at me for
the cuts on my wrists.
I listen as she lists all the things
that hurt her.
It is a short list.
She insists
on them listing them anyway.
I am a witch, she says, I am a
scarlet witch at the stake.
I take and I take.
I do it asleep, and awake.
I do not burn in the fire.
My only sin is desire.
I am not a liar,
but an actor.
I believe
believing your truths
to be a great factor.
I perform.
I perform.
I rehearse and I perform.
A curse, a curse
a generational curse.
I break it.
and I break it.
Red silk sari, fall loosely
from my waist
let them taste, let them taste.
Nahyian Elias is a Bangladeshi-American writer living in New York City. She holds a Master’s Degree in English Adolescent Education from Hunter College.