
table of contents
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The kid had a name.
Most kids in The City
didn’t.
The City
discouraged naming people,
said names distracted them from
their jobs
in the factories,
in the farms,
in the offices.
Only the patrollers got names:
if you chose to join
(technically, everyone who joined
chose to join
but
you got food if you did
and they sometimes fed your family too
and there wasn’t much food if you didn’t),
they gave you a number,
and the higher up the ranks you climbed,
the shorter your number got.
But this kid had named herself Rails,
and she secretly thought of names for all the kids
she played with in the street: doll kid
was Laughs,
the youngest was Youngee
the oldest was Orange-ee,
because his skin looked orange.
I didn’t tell her
that on earth
a hundred years ago
that’d probably be a slur.
Of course,
Rails and Laughs and Orange-ee and the other five kids
would probably die on earth–
I didn’t know what I inhaled here
but it wasn’t oxygen,
and the protection spell
I’d set before I left
was fading
like an insect’s cocoon.
So before I hunted rats, I showed Rails
a summoning circle,
told her she could mess up the symbols in the dust
if she wanted me to change into a monster and crush her
and her whole home.
She scoffed at that too,
and kicked a foot through a symbol–
I did notice, before completing the circle.
I just wanted her to know I was serious.
So my walking stick finished the symbols
in the dust.
The circle and symbols glowed,
bursting into flame,
and I didn’t change into a monster
but my cloak did catch on fire
so I had to put the hood up
so my face wouldn’t burn
and the pillar of orange light
dancing on the pipes and
off the copper
wall
made her scream.
“Told you,” I said.
Dragon black cloaks
hold flames
like sea mammals hold breaths
so I undid the knots and threw it off me with a gust of wind
so the flames could heat some tangled pipes
and I could carve a new circle on the ground
with my walking stick.
“How’d you do that?” Rails whispered.
“I’m a witch,” I said, completing the new circle,
and the spring warmth of the protection spell floated around me,
settling in my lungs like dew,
on my skin like a gel.
“What’d that one do?” she asked.
“That one lets me breathe here.
It also
shields me a bit from the heat.”
“So you can catch rats like that?”
She poked fingers at the ground. “Making circles?”
I chuckled. “I have a faster way to catch rats.”
And I waved the flower petal.
Then I spat on it, bloody saliva beading on the waxy plant.
“Ready?” I whispered.
Her forehead crinkled.
“Don’t move,” I said,
and uttered my demon incantation
of death.
A mutter, a distant yowl
floated from the petal,
drifting toward the nearest life source–Rails.
I whispered that it’d feed on nothing there
but thin skin and thinner bones,
and blew it toward the dome wall.
The mutter ballooned, and half a dozen rats plummeted
from the pipes overhead.
Rails yelped and covered her
dirty bald head.
“Told you,” I said.
Then I drew the mutter back
and inhaled the life force.
Took off a couple years, at least.
The petal in my hand crumbled,
and I picked up the smoldering cloak.
“Want to learn how to cook over a dragon fire?”
“said names distracted them from their jobs” an eerie look into the future it sometimes feels like we’re creating. Really thought provoking poem.
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thank you! I was definitely going for eerie dystopian vibes here 🧡
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