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[i don't have any sisters]
I walked to the ocean to ask my father–
why won’t my sisters let me eat pomegranates, I yell over the roar of the seawater.
the ocean rumbles as it rears back little by little, tides drawing in flecks of sand as it retreats
a seagull slices through the sky overhead flying towards the rugged cliffs just beyond, impervious to the sounds of water below
Don’t pretend you care how she’s doing, I say.
white clouds pass overhead, soft as cotton balls and smudged with gold
the water exhales and waves crash down onto the ocean’s mild surface,
sending a spray of saltwater flying upward as it charges thunderously towards shore
I don’t understand, I say.
(the wind gusts past me, carrying the scent of salt and sea air with it)
(you don’t have sisters, it whispers)
-
Do you or do you not have sisters? asked the robin perched on the wooden fence.
I have sisters and they are dead! I said.
When did they die? it asked.
They were always dead! I said.
(it ruffles its feathers in annoyance and I see the amber eyes under its wings when it does so)
I don’t believe you have sisters. I’ve never seen your sisters before, it said accusingly. I believe they’re like me and they don’t really exist.
(∆√∂Ωåß≈çƒ years ago, you see, a mosquito caught in its throat)
How do you feel about your sisters? it said.
They were always dead! I said.
I don’t see what that has to–
They were always dead, I said.
I don’t understand what–
They were always dead, I said. They were always dead. They were always dead. They were always dead. They were always–
-
–dead.
-
Why not pomegranates? I asked by many sisters over five years ago, as other people spoke loudly in other rooms.
[Because it is the symbol of the trapped,] they hiss in unison. [Its seeds grow into cages. Its flesh ensnares.]
Why? I said.
[The pomegranate is the fruit of prisoners.
And you are also the fruit of prisoners.
And they were the fruit of prisoners.
And so imprisonment is your birthright.
The blood-red juice has already stained your tongue.
You are bound.
But you are not yet in chains.
Eat not the pomegranate and you will never be in chains.]
Are they getting worse? I ask.
[Worse?] My many sisters smile. [There is no better or worse to those born ghosts. They were always dead.]
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