76 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
76 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: "Wicked"
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contributor: "@patrickalexander082@gmail.com"
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tags: #general, #patrickalexander082gmailcom
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---
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She smiled while the child stopped breathing.
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I am telling his story ecause people keep asking why the old palace is locked, and why no one goes near the dry river at night. I was there. I saw what happened. I did not understand it then. I do now.
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This happened when I was young, in a small town in West Africa. We had a queen. She was not born a queen. She married the king when he was already old. When he died, she stayed.
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People called her Mother of the Land. They said she was kind. They said she brought peace. I believed that too, at first.
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I worked in the palace as a helper. I carried water. I swept floors. I slept in a small room near the back wall. I saw things others did not see.
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The queen never aged. That was the first thing.
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Years passed. Children grew up. Old men died. The queen stayed the same. Same face. Same skin. Same sharp eyes.
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When people joked about it, they laughed it off. “She has good blood,” they said. “She uses herbs.”
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But at night, I heard things.
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Some nights, I heard crying. Not loud. Soft. Like someone trying not to be heard. It came from the inner room, the one no worker could enter. When I asked the other helpers, they said they heard nothing.
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Then children started to go missing.
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At first, it was one child. A boy who used to sell oranges near the gate. People said he ran away. Then a girl from the river side. Then another boy. Always poor children. Always children with no strong family.
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The queen said nothing. The guards said nothing.
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One night, the head maid sent me to bring water to the inner room. This had never happened before. My hands shook as I walked there.
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The door was half open.
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I wish I had turned back.
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Inside, the room smelled bad. Like blood and smoke. There were bowls on the floor. Dark stains on the mat. The queen stood near the wall. She was washing her hands.
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On the mat was a child. A small girl. Her eyes were open, but she was not moving.
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The queen looked at me and smiled.
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“You are late,” she said.
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I could not speak. I could not move.
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She told me to put the water down. My body obeyed before my mind could stop it.
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She knelt by the girl and touched her face. The girl did not react.
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“She will help the land,” the queen said. “Like the others.”
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Then she did something I will never forget.
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She placed her mouth on the child’s chest and breathed in. Hard. Slow. Like she was drinking air from inside the girl.
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The girl’s mouth opened, but no sound came out.
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When the queen stood up, the child was still.
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The queen’s skin looked brighter. Her eyes looked full.
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I ran.
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I did not stop until I reached my room. I vomited on the floor. I cried without sound. I wanted to leave, but I knew I could not. The gates were locked at night.
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The next morning, the queen announced a festival. She said the land was blessed. Drums played. People danced. No one spoke of the missing children.
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I tried to tell someone. I told one guard. He stared at me and walked away. I told an old woman who sold food near the palace. She looked at me and said, “Be careful.”
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That night, someone knocked on my door.
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It was the queen.
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She came in alone. No guards. She sat on my mat like she owned it.
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“You saw,” she said.
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I nodded.
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She said she was chosen long ago. That the land needed blood to stay rich. That the children were gifts. That if she stopped, the land would die.
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Then she touched my head.
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“You will forget,” she said.
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I did not forget.
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But I stayed quiet.
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More children went missing. The land stayed rich. Crops grew. Rain came on time.
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Years passed.
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Then a dry season came. Long and hard. Crops failed. People got angry. They whispered that the queen had lost her power.
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One night, the crying came back. Louder this time.
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I followed the sound.
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The inner room door was open again.
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Inside, the queen was weak. She looked old. Her skin sagged. Her hair was thin. On the mat was a boy. Alive. Tied. Crying.
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She tried to feed. She could not.
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I do not know what came over me.
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I grabbed a torch and shouted.
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Guards ran in. People followed.
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They saw everything.
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The boy. The stains. The bowls. The queen on her knees.
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She screamed. Not in fear. In rage.
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They dragged her out. She fought like an animal.
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At the river, the elders made a choice. No trial. No words.
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They tied her and pushed her into the water.
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She did not sink.
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She floated. She laughed. Then the water pulled her down.
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The river dried up the next year.
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The palace was locked.
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I left the town soon after.
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People still say the queen was a story. A lie. A way to explain bad things.
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I know the truth.
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Sometimes, when the night is quiet, I hear breathing that is not mine.
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And I remember her smile.
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