Home » cho 16:3 | Dec. 2020 Table of Contents » John Zheng, Sick

John Zheng

Sick

Malaria befriends me. Chills and high fever pay their visits every hour. Cocooned in blankets, I shiver, teeth chattering. Cold sweat soaks my shirt. I unwrap myself, trying to clench my jaws. Dazed and dehydrated, I feel afloat like a life preserver. The red pills from the barefoot doctor don’t work.

summer night
moonlight
through the window
a linen shroud
wrapping me

Farmhands take me to the long-distance bus station, saying they want me to get treated in an urban hospital. I know I am always a stranger in their eyes. It’s a stormy day. Thunder and lightning play symphonies. The bus jerks along slowly through the crisscrossing of rain. I begin to feel better, knowing I won’t die. I’m on my way home.

mom’s tears
flow into the soil
of my heart
the sickbed throbs
with life

About the Author

John Zheng has authored Enforced Rustication in the Chinese Cultural Revolution and published haibun and tanka prose in CHO, Haibun TodaySouthern Quarterly and Spillway

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