Hands
Michelle Fang
edited: Kashvi Ramani
A frigid gray fog settles over the world,
Muffling every angle and ray of light under a thick inky blanket. I shrink into my overcoat
and rub my hands together,
Trying to subdue the shiver of crisp, cool air rattling up my bones. Nainai wraps her hands around mine;
I jump silently at the sudden touch of sandpaper skin.
As a child, I’d trace my dad's smooth palms
and ask how a lady’s hands could be so unbecoming as Nainai’s. His response chronicled his mother’s days in the kitchen
or her days lifting timber to earn five cents
or her days training at a military academy.
Her days, he’d smile, spent ensuring we never had hands like hers.
No matter how passionate a speech my dad gave,
I would still feel the slight tug of dread in my stomach
on our visits to her apartment
knowing my cheeks would be polished scarlet by Nainai’s sandpaper hands.
A brittle biting breeze parts my hair and fans out on my neck;
the chill is softened.
On this night, Nainai’s hands are calloused, neglected, and graceless as always, But they are warm as well
And they carve out my world in a rare honey glow.