Friday, July 31, 2020

The Empty Room

From the massive woman's mouth came a small girl’s voice,

asking us, “Did you see my baby brother?”

She’d surprised us in the hotel lobby, by the stairwell,

saying she’d been a good big sister, till she lost him.

We escaped her wheedling and got to our room at last,

but in the night we were awoken by a child’s crying.

The crying came from our bathroom pipes,

which the proprietor at length told the history of.

“‘Devil’s veins,’ locals called ‘em a century past,”

he said tapping, “when they saw ‘em installed here.”

Half-awake, I heard the child crying again hours later.

I left my wife sleeping to follow it along the pipes.

I’d left the door ajar, not wanting to wake her or leave her without the key.

The pipes ran along the hall ceiling and bent left and down another stair,

splitting like roots toward the basement.

Needing to find those cries in the pipes made me abandon sense—

my wife was missing when I returned.

I close my eyes now and see

the marks her nails made in the sheets as she was dragged out.

The proprietor was disassembling electronics,

looking for bugs and finding only insects, when I ran in.

He told me how we couldn’t leave,

an exchange had been made, none of it was his choice.

To find her, I would have to become the kidnapper of the child I’d searched for,

the horror I’d feared in the walls.

Where other guests on other floors were kept,

I heard one say, hoarsely chuckling, “Never stop believing.”


Occult Streets

We catch a glimpse of our death in the face of a stranger,

down an occult street.

Along an alien alley once,

I heard a child at a window whisper my name without opening his mouth.

A gathering under the window seemed to recognize me

and came at me with open arms.

One of them, a woman in a guard uniform,

clasped my shoulders hard, as if to detain me, then laughed.

She leaned toward a gaunt, faintly familiar man and stroked him,

grinning, watching for my reaction.

Following her inside, I found the child standing beside an urn. 

All the others had withered into husks.

“Tell me what it says,” whispered the child, pointing to the urn’s inscription,

but I refused to look.