25 - Counting bones instead of candles
The whispers are always here
I hear their voices even as I sweep – like dark spirits
hovering over me saying “careful, careful, don’t knock the bones.”
The guards with their black boots tell me to hurry or I
might be next.
If they hear the voices, they do not say so, yet they hear
the bones rattle as the broom pushes them across the floor.
The ovens are already dark, stained black with soot that
never comes clear – even though I scrub and scrub.
I fear the dark when the voices talk most, and when I can
almost see the shapes kneeling on the ground like grotesque gargoyles begging
guards for mercy none of us ever expects them to grant.
I think often of my last birthday – before the soldiers came
– and my mother making me a cake with ten candles on it.
The guards – for amusement – sometimes ask me to count the
bones, needing to make certain that all who walked in come out again, bones
piled high in the barrel I push.
I don’t know which one is my mother’s or my father’s.
Once, I dreamed of killing those who killed them.
My nights are filled with revenge my days never see.
I cannot dream. Or maybe the dreams I do dream are so filled
with the voices I know no longer have the ability to speak, and I see their
shadows day light or night, of people who have already turned to dust.
Once I believed someone might save me before my voice turned
to whispers and my body turned to dust. But now I sweep and scrub and count the
bones, waiting for my time when someone else will sweep me up.
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