top of page

When The Tūi Call & The Cat With Yellow Eyes

Dalas Kruger


When The Tūi Call 

The tūī call at dawn each morning, 

weaving honeyed hymns through the pale light. 

Their song spills over our sleepless joy, 

over hours spent stitching dreams to words—

the sun always seemed to rise too soon. 

By dusk, your bags lined the door. 

You said goodbye like a stranger would— 

a soft, obligatory kindness. 

That night, I lay awake counting heartbeats, 

each one thudding where your voice had been. 

The tūī still call at dawn, relentless. 

Their songs now sound like mourning rites, each note a wound that whistles your name. 

The same light spills, unsoftened by you— 

the sun still rises, but slower somehow.


The Cat With Yellow Eyes 

He only came when the night was soft. 

A shadow with hunger for a heartbeat, 

black fur swallowing the light by the stairwell. 

I kept a bowl waiting, always full. 

He never looked at me when he ate. 

I told myself he was mine— 

that the sound of my voice 

was something he remembered. 

But some nights I’d see him on other balconies, head bent to other hands. 

Still, I opened the door 

when I heard the soft scrape of claws, 

pretending it was affection, not routine. 

He never lingered past the last bite. 

He never stayed to purr. 

You were like that. 

All lean grace and wandering need. 

You came for the warmth, 

for what could fill you, 

and I gave it gladly. 

Now the bowl rusts on the step, 

rain collecting where the milk once was. 

I still leave it out every night, 

just in case he remembers my kindness wasn’t fickle, my love was never rationed.


Recent Posts

See All
I stood at the edge and claimed it as central…

Dandifil after Toni Morrison I arrived to meet the ancestors at the edge of the world. I arrived breathless, dripping of sweat, snot and tears and my jaws clenched so hard my vision blurred. At leas

 
 
 
Petrol Prices

Zara Boon I sit and listen as my belly dancing class discusses petrol prices. The other Arab person in the class isn't here today. I miss her familiar words, the warm accent, the laughter as we trade

 
 
 
The Forever Foreigner

Dalas Kruger A perpetual tourist, bags forever packed, passport forever full. Never truly calling anywhere home. I live between arrivals— half in translation, half erased. Each place a version of myse

 
 
 
Gig_Guide Panel Guitar.png

Salient is published by, but remains editorially independent from, the Victoria University of Wellington Students Association (VUWSA). Salient is funded in part by VUWSA through the Student Services Levy. Salient is a member of the Aotearoa Student Press Association (ASPA). 

Complaints regarding the material published in Salient should first be brought to the VUWSA CEO in writing (ceo@vuwsa.org.nz). If not satisfied by the response, complaints should be directed to the Media Council (info@mediacouncil.org.nz). 

Gig_Guide Panel DJ.png
bottom of page