It’s nice to belong to a city
And own a souvenir shop
Magnets for a fridge
T-shirts double the price outside
That sort of place
I love to follow the outsider gaze
the curious tourists
Not knowing the local language
Doing all kinds of currency conversions
Silently in their heads
I wonder which homes
In which countries
Will be gifted
Those bubble-packed mugs
I wonder if one of those mugs
Would break in transit
If a pen to be gifted, would leak
I wonder if the memory of a city they visited
And its famed beauty
Gets defiled by these
If it makes my city
And its products
As ordinary as theirs
Across the Road
Across the road
There is this couple holding hands
Like there was no tomorrow
As though they would lose each other
Miss the train to nowhere
If they let go of each other
They haven’t done an iota of shopping
No bread
No eggs
No ham
So that their hands aren’t engaged
Holding things from their mundane list
The omelette can clearly wait
The dogs on my side
Bark just once
and lay down
Across the road
Might be a promise of forever
This side of the street
There is only the hum of air-conditioning
An inertia
That won’t swallow this summer afternoon sun
Vandana Kumar is a French teacher and multiple award-winning poet from New Delhi, India. Her poems have been published in over 150 national and international websites and anthologies of repute. She is a Pushcart prize nominee 2023 and her poetry collection ‘Mannequin of Our Times’ has won several awards.