Ash Wednesday
By Sarp Sozdinler
I lift my mother’s urn high to show her the places she’d never seen inside the house when she was alive. I’m showing her the top shelves of her wardrobe, the food cabinet. I carry her upstairs. I place the urn on my brother’s top bunk, assuring her that he’ll return. That she needn’t worry. I grab a palmful of her ashes and scatter it along the walls as if to ward off an unwelcome spirit. I pour her down the drain like bad wine. I bury her in our neighbor’s yard. I pray she takes root and returns anew.
About the Author
Sarp Sozdinler has been published in Electric Literature, Kenyon Review, Masters Review, Vestal Review, Fractured Lit, Hobart, Maudlin House, and Trampset, among other journals. His stories have been selected for anthologies including the Pushcart Prize, Best Small Fictions, and Wigleaf Top 50. He’s currently working on his first novel in Philadelphia and Amsterdam.
