Thursday, 13 October 2022

A Tale of Four Women by Catherine Somerton, black coffee

In Vancouver’s Downtown East Side

a teenager wandered, her name was Jade

She was new to the city and new to the street

Jade was hungry and had no place to stay

With a smile

she asked people if they knew of places

Most ignored her,

two attacked her

Beaten and brutally violated,

Jade was left

on the street

surrounded by trash

 

A woman drove up, her name was Linda

She saw Jade and knew she should help her

It was her duty as a feminist and fellow woman

But she couldn’t

it would soil her clothes,

she’d be late for work

No, her first duty was to her career and herself

She drove on and

Jade was left

on the street

surrounded by trash

Linda was an executive in a major corporation

 

A woman drove by, her name was Gerri

she saw Jade and knew she should help her

It was her duty as a doctor and fellow woman

But she couldn’t

She could be attacked

or infected with disease

No, her first duty was to her safety and herself

She drove on  and

Jade was left

on the street

surrounded by trash

Gerri was the medical director of Planned Parenthood

 

A woman drove by, her name was Terese

she saw Jade and helped her into her car

She took Jade to the hospital and bought her new clothes

She bought Jade a meal

then took her to a safe place to rest

She visited Jade later with important referrals so

Jade was helped

to get off the street

away from the trash

Terese was an Evangelical Christian

 

About the author

Catherine Somerton lives in Eastern Ontario, Canada. She loves traveling and has done ministry work in various parts of Canada and the United States. Catherine’s first published work will appear in the November edition of Ariel Chart and she is presently working on a  book for middleschoolers .

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