The Sacrifice

Donna Vorreyer
| poetry

 

The herd of goats whispers, We’re tired of the snow. I whisper back, I know, scratch between their curved horns. Four of them chew hay, three jostle for feed, and one is on the milking table, udders full and bleating when a great boom sounds against the door. The youth brigade stomps forth in heavy boots, brandishing chains and curses, expressions that age knows by heart. I can no longer hide. I hold out my hands for shackles, and they march me into the trees, a crone in their midst, a villain from a fairy tale. If this were true, I could conjure some magic to escape. But stories are only stories, which the brigade doesn’t know, so I am forced down into the cold river, made to gather stones as I grow numb, until I grow heavy enough to sink. The sun blinks through branches, the cries of the goats riding the thick air. I close my eyes. How light my eyelids feel, my hair, as I am swept beneath the current. The brigade ignores me. They will still ignore me when my bones return, will never acknowledge my haunting as they look in the mirror at their own aging faces. But the goats will know. They will butt their horns against the doors of their stalls. They will heel to the sound of my rattling.

Donna Vorreyer is the author of Unrivered (forthcoming, 2025), To Everything There Is (2020), Every Love Story is an Apocalypse Story (2016) and A House of Many Windows (2013), all from Sundress Publications. Her poetry, fiction, and essay work have appeared in PloughsharesCherry Tree, Poet Lore, Salamander, Harpur Palate, Booth, and elsewhere. A retired middle school teacher, she lives and creates in the Chicago area where she hosts the monthly online reading series A Hundred Pitchers of Honey and is a co-founder/editor of the new journal Asterales: A Journal of Arts & Letters.

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