By Ghazala Datoo O’Keefe
Our days begin early. The sky is dark, stars hiding behind the wispy grey clouds. The road is lit by a single streetlight and the glow of the moon above. The world is silent, and the stillness is broken only by the occasional scampering of a squirrel, running on high wires, or digging for treasure amongst the dried leaves. The clouds drift in front of the moon. It slips behind the bare trees.
The girls ask how it is that the moon seems to travel where they go. I could explain. Instead, I let the question sit unanswered. Ayana runs down the street, hair flying behind her. She turns towards the glow: The moon is here! Ziya runs up the street, her black-and-white backpack jostling against her dark jacket. She shouts. No! the moon is here. Their laughter fills the morning void. They don’t need answers. I turn and point to the face that never changes. No, it’s here! We huddle close again, giggling. The cold air whips past us. Eight years have vanished in quiet moments like this. I pull them towards me. Their warmth rushes through my body.
The flashing lights appear before the bus does. Kiss and a hug, Mummy, Ayana asks. I hug them both as the door swings open. Little legs climb up the stairs. They scan their badges, find their seats, dark heads bowing together conspiratorially. I can barely make out their faces through the worn, smudged windows. I know they are smiling.
Ghazala Datoo O’Keefe is an immigrant, physician, and mother. Born in India, she grew up in London and Mumbai, and currently lives Atlanta in the United States, with her husband and twin girls. Her work has been previously published in Isele Magazine and in the Bangalore Review. She is currently working on an essay collection on the themes of identity, immigration, and belonging.
Image by Tom Fisk courtesy of Pexels
lunar lush loving lilting lifting life
Beautifully written. Your love and joy for your children shine through this work. Thank you
Eight years vanish in quiet moments like this. How lovely your pen sensed the importance of capturing this one, to slow down time. Illuminating. Lovely.
This is a charming story full of love.
I just loved this….so uplifting and restorative! You have a wonderful way of rendering scenes and emotion. Thank you for this gift.
This is beautiful and so visual! Your love shines through!
A lovely meditation on the wonder around us, even in the midst of daily routine. 💕
I can barely make out their faces on the smudged windows. I know they are smiling. Love that when I hear those words it feels like I also am looking at that school bus window, and at that moment nothing else in the world matters, but the smiling faces of those two little girls.