Glass cobalt evil eyes from Turkey
hang in windows in every room.
A hammered tin Hamsa
hangs outside each entrance.
These baubles I placed for protection
from all harm,
the seen and unseen.
After centuries of abuse,
words and other wounds
I forgave Baba Yaga,
whom I believed
would no longer eat children.
Her advanced age, gnarled weak bones
grew frail in unforgiving winters,
she grew lonely with failing powers.
I moved her out of her high-rise hut
into our warm home
far away from black ice.
I tended my garden
as she grew accustomed
to nourishing meals and healing sun.
I began to wonder
if there was maybe a little love
or was I merely a place to eat and rest…
Her voice regained
familiar strength and timbre
I heard her chanting spells behind her door.
Her responses to my questions
growled back
Her elderly hands grew talons
ready to pierce and slice
even the most innocent requests.
In between battles about last century’s war
I prayed daily to my god of poetry.
I found myself denying recent scratches
rinsing drops of blood down the drain.
I shielded torn flesh from my loved ones
I was cursed with guilt
for welcoming her in.
When the plague locked us all inside for months,
it was easy to cover my scars and wounds.
“Come here”Baba Yaga hissed one day,
after she again drew blood with her tongue,
her claws reaching for me,
“Mother knows you need redoing.”
Diane Funston lives in Marysville, California. Diane has been published in journals including California Quarterly, Lake Affect, Tule Review, San Diego Poetry Annual, Whirlwind, Summation, among others. She served two years as Poet-in-Residence for Yuba-Sutter Arts and Culture Her chapbook, “Over the Falls” was published by Foothills Publishing in 2022.
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