by Sally Zigmond
dandelion tea
Arm in
arm, Dick and I fight our way through the forest of uncut barley towards the
church along with our neighbours. We do not speak. We do not laugh. Even the
bairns are silent. The mill has rusted and we hear Tom’s best cow pleading to be
milked. I will put her out of her misery when I can but God comes first.
When we
are all assembled we silently count the heads but don't tell others although we
all do it. There were sixty of us last week including bairns and babes at arms.
Today there are fewer than thirty.
‘Susan’s
not here,’ I whisper to Dick, ‘nor Luke, nor Seth.’ He shrugs.
Something’s different though. It’s neither the absent neighbours nor the
silence. Nor is it the growing forest of candles that flicker in the gloom but
fear so thick I can taste it.
More than
ten summers ago, when my chores were done, I’d run to the church field and play
blind man’s bluff with the other village children among the daisies and the
grazing sheep. We’d dodge and duck to avoid the blindfolded figure stumbling
towards us, never knowing who’d be caught next. ’Twas but a childish game. We
didn't know what it meant.
As we
leave I take Dick’s arm. Sweat beads his pale face although the wind is chill. I
dare not lift his sleeve because I know what he is hiding in his armpit. I will
open our door and bolt it behind me and wait. It will not be
long..
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