The Good People
By Maria Schrater
Call our name
Speak into the breeze
Drop it unthinking
Court our attention:
The sixth sense that screams
Someone is watching, hungry
In the room you know is empty
Eye-flashes in torchlight
Gone on the return swing
Something has shifted
Though you live alone
Fatigue hardening your bones
Missing hair, aching heart,
This, my dear, is just the start
Names have power
You are careless with ours
We’ll relieve you of yours
Fairness from Fair Folk
No matter your wards
Best remember:
Hair teeth blood breath toenails spit skin sweat hopes speech dreams desires nightmares
Are besieged gates
Even closing your eyes
Brings the horde
S w a r m i n g
Invaders, entrailed, forget
What mercy entails
Elfshot invisible stings less
Than passing breezes, carries
Plague-boils, madness, mouth-foam
Nerves turned silken puppet strings,
Ending in chains, pitchforks, fire,
Hoofbeats on Samhain, winding horns
Howling birdsong, ride-wind dragging
Sulfur and roses, mildew and pine sap
We stop to watch the spectacle, as you
Bereft, gain a new name in the mob-call
“Monster” hurled by yesterday’s neighbors
We Folk do not interfere, we have taken
Our dues in a bewitching glass bauble
Sitting shelved beside
Other trophies.
*
Maria Schrater is a writer and poet with a deep love of folklore. She has a B.A. in Fiction from Columbia College Chicago. Her work has appeared in Hair Trigger, and her story published there received a Certificate of Merit from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association in 2018. She lives with two cats, Stormy and Tempest.