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Wasp First, an attic, dry and dusty filled with objects old and fascinating. A dirty window filtering summer’s light, the smell of camphor and cedar escaping the blanket chest. Add a girl child of twelve. This is her secret hiding place where she digs into cracked leather steamer chests and discovers clothes her mother wore as a child. She has spent hours holding, examining, stroking the elaborate Chinese kimonos, delighting in the lightness of silk, the brilliant colors, beautiful embroidery and what she has decided is the faintest trace of a perfume she calls, “Mommy”. She is sitting cross-legged reading a novel purloined from her father’s bedroom. A very bad man has died and is being judged in heaven. There is no man, woman, cat or dog willing to speak in his defense. Then a sparrow steps forward and tells of his rescue by this evil man. The man is spared hell-fire. Impressionable, believing God about to strike at any moment, she wonders what will happen to her. She believes she has murdered two women. A buzzing sound intrudes, breaking her concentration. A wasp is buzzing, angry and desperate, hitting feebly against the window. Curious, she moves towards the window and watches the wasp. It has ceased struggling and is resting, perhaps to gain strength. She has a terrible fear of bees, wasps And moths, and yet as she watches she pities the wasp. Would a rescue be possible? Opening the window, she takes a scrap of paper and gingerly approaches. Hands shaking, breath held in fear, she slides the paper under. She moves the insect out the window and shakes the paper. Did it fly? She couldn’t tell, but as she closed the window she had the thought that perhaps God wouldn’t strike her with lightning this day, and maybe, just maybe, when He came to judge her sinful life, a wasp would speak of a day in the attic. |
Additional Notes:
True story. Needs work. Again, is this poetry or prose? I seem to be stuck in story mode these days.
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