When Metal Sings
Nisha was seven years old when she first understood that metal could sing. Her father, Dev, was a welder in Diamond, Guyana, a quiet town on the east bank of the Demerara River, where the red dirt roads met the hum of industry. He worked at a small fabrication shop, coming home with his shirt flecked by tiny burns and his forearms mapped with pale scars. When she asked if it hurt, he would smile and say, "The metal does tell you what it need. You just have to learn to hear it." On Saturdays, she would sit on an upturned bucket and watch him weld. The arc would strike, and the world would turn white-blue, showering orange sparks to the concrete floor. "You're staring again," he would say. “Don’t watch the spark eh. You will get blind!” "I'm learning," she would reply. By sixteen, she had taught herself to weld. Dev came home to find her in their backyard shed, his spare helmet on her head, running a smooth bead along two plates of scrap. She pulled...