The Echo of the Fen


​Only one person shed a tear.
The woman who wove his bones,
the woman who finally reached out a hand
to flick the switch and silence the machines.
A savage end delivered by a member of the same trade - one dark shadow striking another
all within the high-walled silence of the state.
Even a mother’s mercy had run dry.
She whispering to the air that it was for the best,
given the hollow shell that remained.
​And so, the public ledger closes.
We, who paid for the iron bars,
Now pay for the fire and the urn.
A final tax on a devious life.
The man who thought a change of tyres
could wash the blood from his hands.
​The man beside who; stood the shadow of a shadow.
a woman of the classroom,
a keeper of children who kept his secrets instead.
She who wore her lies like a second skin,
trading her freedom for a traitor’s peace.
Now carrying a borrowed soul
with a borrowed name,
just a ghost bought and paid for by us; the people,
vanishing into the crowd behind a brand-new face.
​Does a case like this exhume our best side or our worst?
When the monster falls, 
the old cry rises,
"An eye for an eye - a life for a life!"
The gallows haunt the public squares once more.
For; in the quiet of the heart - the questions ache.
What would I crave if the children were mine,
if the lights of my life were snuffed out in such a manner?
​And what of the one who killed the killer?
Does a murder in a cell wash the world clean,
or do we just need another yard rope?
Is the rage of Anthony Russell a different shade of black
darker than the darkness that fired those first blows?
​Who could break someone's world so completely?
Who could steal the breath of two ten-year-olds?
The mind is a labyrinth of mis-meshing gears
a fever-fed nightmare of power; pride and screaming ghosts.
It is a cocktail of the conscious and the void,
where empathy is a language never learned,
and control is the only god to be served.
​In the end there are no winners in this mess.
A murderer is murdered by his mirror image
behind a locked door in a darkened hall.
All we are left with is the heavy weight of forgiveness - a bridge too far for many to cross.
​If we say they are sick - we acknowledge the wound.
If the wound cannot be healed,
then let the walls stay high; bars shut and the locks stay fastened,
keeping their darkness at bay
for all our sakes
and for the length of their natural days.

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