Creative Commons ~ Erik Alfredo
She listened to the secrets
plastered inside the walls
as if she was merely
a chair propped against neutrality.
She whispered, “It was not my fault,”
to the demons stirring her memory,
yet they continued to hiss and accuse.
Ungreased hinges and creaking floor
had announced evil’s passage
each night of a thousand hours,
but she had buried her head
in the feather down of pretense’s pillow
and spoke not a word.
She excused her husband’s nightly visits
to his step daughter’s bed as merely comfort
for a child who cried out from nightmares.
There were no questions when the sun rose,
only deaf ears and blind eyes.
Breakfast was served with toast and silence.
There came the day when Pandora’s lid
was torn away by a school room confession.
Her daughter exposed the truth of nighttime lies
and denial became no defense.
The secrets that now whisper are those
of another girl child whose lips can never speak.
She took her pain into the grave and left a note
that simply said, “Mother go to hell.”
©Susie Clevenger 2012
dVerse Poets Pub ~ Open Link Night Week ~ 64
dVerse Poets Pub ~ Open Link Night Week ~ 64
This poem is not about my experience, but painfully this scenario
has happened too often. I have included some resources for help for
those who are or have been victims.
Comments
This doesn't pull any punches and makes so many valid statements. There is no crime worse than stealing a child's trust or robbing them of their innocence.
Deep, and powerful Susie.
A very tough subject in a well-penned poem.
Anna :o]