The fall of Suharto
a poem by Farah Dianputri
Something about that red brick, Brutalist architecture
Reminded me of Jakarta—
Rama finding his Sita near Cilandak,
Only to throw her in the pyre they made out
Of the Marriot I think I was one
When my Nenda dropped me, buckling knees
Bracing the blow that buffeted through
The tarmac that knitted this tattered city together as it racked itself apart
At seventy-two this country is younger than my dead grandfather
Whose breath reeked of kretek and Fisherman’s Friend
Folly in the crinkle of a smile, he carried with that scrunched
Packet always offered to give me a try, not of the cigarettes but the mint
Pungent to the point I recall old sultans in the southeast
Used to chew and spit betel to prove their worth
I’ve seen their pewter nutcrackers at a museum in Kuala Lumpur or perched in my mother’s cabinet,
Perhaps I’ve got a bit of royalty in me, a stubborn little princess
Who would take the burnt stubs and smack them on
The alabaster rimming the columns at Westminster.
I’ve had conversations till the connections were tendered tenuous
He tells me his creativity is mired with temptation to stray
Like the desire for a drink or a fag or a doubie
He goes down like tequila and you forget everything
She tells me that if anything comes out of the love polygon
I simulated to make sense of her polyamory
It would be something to write about.
Some people just stick to your skin, I try to count the times
I had to peel myself off someone else
A few dips of whiskey in, she tells me about her dead sister,
how we romanticise tragedy we were too young to remember
and how we implicate them in the slights we commit now.
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