The One Unseen
The One Unseen
She lies on the bed,
Or rather,
The filthy, old mattress.
There is no civilized word that can be used to describe it.
It crawls with creatures
And is laced with substances,
Things for which she does not know their names.
There is nowhere for her to go.
She is illegal,
Unwanted,
Hidden,
Discarded,
Unseen.
Those who loved her
Are either gone
Or dead
Or far away.
The men come so often,
But they failed to notice her
In any way,
But the way they want.
They do not even notice her chains,
Though they have to feel them.
They do not notice her eyes,
Closed to the inevitable pain,
Utterly vacant,
As she tries
Every time
To leave her own body.
They do not notice her age,
Her worn, thin face,
Her bones that almost stick out of her skin
From near starvation.
They do notice her filth,
But this is not hers,
Nor are her chains.
These are all things
She never asked for..
It is his fault
That she is left like this.
They complain
And take out their frustrations.
On the skeleton of a girl,
Who once had a life.
She is punished by them
And by the one,
Who took her,
But it is not her crime.
Her life was across the border,
In a country that was hated by the world,
That hated the world right back.
She knew none of this,
But only what the regime taught.
She had once been a good student,
But she could never hope to go to school again.
After all,
She was,
As the government of where she was claimed,
An illegal economic migrant.
Yet,
There was nothing economic about her life,
And she was a migrant out of necessity.
She was only deemed illegal by the government
Of the land which held her in its grasp.
They did not care to know
That she had been tricked and fooled,
That her father had starved himself to death,
So that her mother, brothers, sister, and her, could continue to live.
They did not care to know
That her mother and sister were sold
Far away
to supposed farmers,
In reality,
Members of the same gang.
They did not care to know
That her brothers were now known as wandering swallows,
Children, who lived on the streets,
Because there was usually no more home for them.
They did not care to know
That she did not know
The fate of all her immediate family,
Much less her extended.
They did not care to know
Her name
Or her story.
They did not care to know
That she was locked in a house,
Chained to an abominable, soaked mattress,
That veritably moved on its own.
They did not care to know
That she was Almost always naked,
In the hot and in the cold.
They did not care to know
That her owner
Had cut a hole
In his own roof,
So that he could give her more misery
From the natural world above.
They did not care to know
That she was almost always locked in
Behind a deadbolt and a heavy door,
Only known
To those who had the key
And to the occasional stranger,
Who was too terrified to intervene.
They did not care to know
That her only brief moments of respite
Were working his untended fields,
Or cleaning his squalid house.
They did not care to know
That she was not even a teenager yet,
And that a new life was growing inside of her,
in the midst of a living death.
They did not care to know
That those, who lived nearby,
Knew of her existence,
His secret,
But cared too little,
Or feared too much,
To do anything
To save her life.
They did not care to know
How close to death she was.
They did not care to know
That she was wasting away.
They did not care to know
Of her horror and panic
From the realization
That she would have a baby
In this evil place.
They did not care to know
Anything about her.
They did not care to know
That there was a soul,
Withered and dying by the second,
But still there,
Behind that vacant stair.
They did not care to know
That the head crawling with lice
Covered with disheveled, tangled hair.
Could still think thoughts of her old life,
Of family,
Of friends,
Of freedom.
They did not care to know
That the ravaged, savaged, tiny body still felt pain,
Even if she hit it from fear
And had worn her throat raw from screaming
In the beginning
So long ago.
They did not care to know
Her at all,
Unless somebody decided to report her
To them,
At which point
They would care enough
To send the police
To take her away
to what had once been her home,
To what would then be her hell.