The Maze
by
Jen Schneider
Number
647 manned the cart.
Pushing
metal shelves on rusty wheels,
through
our darkened hall.
I,
Number 482, am ready. Stop.
Give
me a minute to peruse and choose.
I
take only seconds. Grab my five pounds
of
promise. Others laugh. Quietly.
245.
742, too. They say dreams are pointless.
A
sucker for false promises, I don’t care.
I
must complete the maze.
The
glossy cover’s bright colors excite me.
Beneath
the book jacket, black cardstock.
Forbidden
layers. Dense text, coffee
stained
letters. Lost my glasses months ago.
Too
late to turn back. 647 had moved on.
I
seek directions, but the words are foreign.
Labyrinths,
pathways, walls.
Encrypted
messages, hidden behind plain font text.
I
call out. 647? Silence. Then more laughter.
The
cart gone for the week.
Can’t
turn back now. None of us can.
245
and 742’s taunts echo off the cell wall.
Stuck
in a labyrinth for crimes we never committed.
I
grab my pencil. Its point dulled.
The
leaded tip shaved at an awkward angle.
I use
it to focus, seeking words with meaning.
Once
again, a blank space suggests an opening.
Not
welcoming, but open. I draw a line and moved onward.
Blind
corners, right turns to nowhere.
If I
choose left, can I ever return and go right?
Damn
mazes. Full of dead ends.
* * *
* *
Jen
Schneider is an educator, attorney, and writer. She lives, writes, and works in
small spaces throughout Philadelphia. Her work appears in The Coil, The
Popular Culture Studies Journal, unstamatic, Zingara Poetry Review, 42 Stories
Anthology (forthcoming), Voices on the Move (forthcoming), Chaleur
Magazine, LSE Review of Books, and other literary and scholarly
journals.
I've had fever dreams like this.
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