- One house, returned in parts. Walls sweating. The floor remembering river.
- Four plates (one chipped in the shape of a country that no longer exists, or never did).
- A door that does not close but continues practicing.
- My brother’s shoes. When lifted, they release a sound like someone finishing a sentence.
- A photograph of a woman we agree is our mother, though she looks relieved to be elsewhere.
- One clock (kitchen), keeping a time that does not include us.
- Neighbours, reduced to voices that arrive before their bodies.
- A cupboard of spices, louder now. Turmeric staining even the air.
- A form asking for losses in numbers. We write: still happening.
- The river, gone but not finished. It leaves thin instructions in the mud. We step where it tells us, even indoors.
- Sleep, in fractions. Dreams where the house is dry and refuses us entry.
- A knocking that begins just before morning. Not at the doors—inside the walls, as if something is checking for space.
- The sense that something was misplaced before the flood, and the water has only clarified it.
- Our names, briefly unfamiliar in our own mouths.
- Tomorrow, already used.
This is how we will know when it’s over:
there will be nothing left that recognizes us.
Kumar Sen is a writer from Kolkata, India. His work has appeared in Reading into Culture, Unbroken Journal, New World Writing Quarterly, and Flare Magazine. Trained as a mathematician, he writes in Bengali and English, exploring sensory detail and the subtly absurd. He is also a musician, composer and bibliophile.
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