A storoem, sad but thought-provoking, about deaths in this family. |
The rain is over. The morning dawns dry but dreary. Nighttime moisture saturates the air. The clouds are still riding low and heavy in the sky, gray on top, grayer underneath, their tears of despair appear ready to resume in response to the tiniest insult. It is a fitting day for a funeral, made particularly fitting since it is a girl aged three to be buried, her death the result of carelessness by her older brother. Fitting that the crying of the heavens lasted for days, just abating this morning because the angels have run dry of tears. The brother, then unhappy at babysitting, is now distraught at mourning. Overcome with guilt and grief, he cannot look at the mother. Supposed to watch, protect his sister, distracted he had failed to prevent her from running into the street to her death. At first, their hysterical mother had screamed curses at him, had assailed his very worth. Later, she had shunned him, ignoring his thirst for mother’s love and forgiveness. Now, deep inside, down to the very marrow of his bones, he knows himself to be a son truly unworthy of mother’s love. In the heavy air the sound of a single gunshot reverberates. The mother finds her son dead upon the floor of his sister’s bedroom. “What have I done? What have I done?" she screams, then slowly picks up the gun. Now dead, her precious daughter had been a child of rare beauty, so filled with mischievousness and charm, favored over the son, a gawky boy of twelve. Temporarily, grief had blinded her to duty to the son, but with time forgiveness would have come ... it truly would have come ... to him from her, not like this, not from a gun. “You should have waited, given me time to remember my duty.” Please come visit me at: http://www.gillelands.com/poetry/ |