A dark & poetic tale |
In the darkest cradle in the velvet womb, lay nine little girls in an anodyne tomb. Their eyes rolled backward in their sweet little heads and grey sarcophagi in the place of their beds. All mouths saying nothing, all hearts cold and thick, no pain felt, no suffering, no cuts to the quick. But not so while living; for these nine lasses fair, so dark was their childhood and deep their despair. So vile, so depraved was their own daddy-dear and mommy's wild wrath was a true thing to fear. In the still of the night, to their beds daddy crept and raped them, each one, as they silently wept. In the light of the sun they would hide swollen eyes and tend to their duties in practiced disguise. Their mommy, like Snow White's stepmother, would call; "I will always be fairer than you, one and all!" And as the sun fell, and daylight succumbed, each girl prayed for end to what she knew was to come. So thus were the lives of these little girls nine, until merciful deliverance upon them did shine. Their mommy resented the children she bore and wanted, intensely, to be burdened no more. And so in the night, when the door opened wide, not daddy, but mommy was who the girls eyed. She stepped like a cat through the black and still room with a pillow in hand; a foretelling of doom. Though she was silent, the girls were aware; for to sleep deep and sound would not one of them dare. And when first the pillow masked one pretty face; no sign of a struggle, not one quickened trace. As each new the present would soon slip to past, all smiled at the breath each knew would be her last. |