On a date with the boy I finally like
I talk about my father. 
How he found my mother  
at the officers’ academy, smiling  
and pinning her sarees.  
I tell my date, biting into ravioli, my father hunted  
for the woman who would birth me 
in the bowl of her lap, humming  
lullabies. My father still in office.  
“I really like this guy,” I texted my girlfriends  
from the bathroom on WhatsApp.  
And of course I didn’t tell my date 
how the story unfolded. My father twisted  
my arm, and more, on my sixteenth birthday.  
I was laughing with a boy, unwrapping  
presents. I still blew the candles, 
light in the bruise of the night 
and after, my mother stroked my curls  
on her lap and said, “He is not a monster,”  
“He is not a monster.” “I want to date him,”  
“I want to date him,” my mind was flashing  
as I sat across this warm and confident  
man who made me laugh so hard  
my kajal ran the length of my cheek. O,  
I wanted, then, to love him.