Sanctuary
by Julie Innis
On the seventh day of
their travels, they wander through a gap in the high walls on an avenue between
Chelsea and The Village. An ivy-framed plaque reads "Grace
Cathedral." Grace defies physics with walls of impossibly large
stained-glass windows framed by gray stone hovering in between. The man and
woman stand in the shadow of a tall willow; she marveling at this small
paradise so close to the City's din, and he wondering why no one else is
present counting beads or touching fingers to foreheads and breasts in prayer. Above
the carved wooden doors, a stone Virgin beckons with eroded fingertips. But the
bolt is drawn, the doors locked. Later, a friend remarks, "I'm surprised
you were even allowed through the gate—a woman was raped and murdered there
last night." During dinner, the woman is distracted, trying to piece
it all together—the absence of signs, no chalklines or yellow police tape to
greet them. How is it, she wants to ask, that such a horror could be swallowed
whole so that the next day no mark remains on the cobblestone path or in the
hollowed ground beneath the weeping willow? Instead she accepts the plate
from her lover, his face a mass of irritation: "don't act like this
now." Later she will try to explain her sadness at it all—that
nothing remained—why, even snakes give back the bones.
###
Sanctuary was first published in Echolocation and also appears in Fictionaut and The
Linnet's Wings and won the Glass
Woman Prize in 2010.
Julie Innis's work has appeared in many literary magazines, including Blip, Gargoyle,
Prick of the Spindle, Echolocation, The Linnet's Wings, The Long Story, and
Pindeldyboz, among many others. Her stories have received two Pushcart
Prize nominations and other commendations. Her story collection Three Squares a Day with Occasional Torture
was published in 2012.
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