Medieval

The Fallen Girl

by Marge SimonAugust 9, 2018

Since her untimely birth in the Brothels of Lemorrah, she was mothered by many, daughter of none. The city spawned more children than the poor could afford. Boys were sent to work the streets; young girls to Lemorrah. She'd witnessed them be broken in for service. When it came her turn, she was the only one who didn't cry.

Her name doesn't matter. She's barely seventeen but she looks much older. In the forests surrounding Lemorrah there is a glade that she visits when she is depressed. This time, she thinks of suicide, for she's obtained a knife.

An evening breeze condensed with messages. Would that she were free to follow the moonlight out of this place.

A man approaches from the shadows. His robes are priestly, his demeanor condescending.

"What are you doing here, little sister? Do you await a customer?"

"I'm quite done with customers, Vicar. I can't go back to that."

"How about me, little sister? he smirks, loosening his robe. "Will you not make an exception, on the house?"

Smiling, she stands up. "You are indeed an exception, Vicar, as you've always been," she says, fingering the blade within her pocket.

After it is done, she cleans her knife. To her surprise, the moonlight reflecting off the blade reveals a new path she hasn't noticed before. Smiling, she looks up to the sky and nods her head.

About Marge Simon

Viewing ourselves through alien eyes has always intrigued me. About a decade ago, I read Maria Doria Russell's The Sparrow. In it, a main character, a Jesuit priest, is captured by a alien race after landing on a far-off world. They decide to give him a great honor, though they do not understand humans. Sandoz's metacarpals are cut away to make it seem that he has long elegant fingers which start at his wrists, and with which he cannot even feed himself.

As an artist as well as a writer, the concept was so horrific that I had to write a story that had a similar theme. It was first published as a short poem in Strange Horizons.

- Marge Simon

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