The Voice from the Wall
Lena St. Clair
tle, my motold me my great-grandfatenced a beggar to die in t possible later t-grandfat, or er.
I used to play out t moments over and over again in my ioner strip off t and lead o t;traitor,quot; read tioner, quot;is sentenced to die ts.quot; But before o er, my great-grandfatily put back toget;As tting me do; said t, quot;I t t I I is on t; And t-grandfato s .
I once asked my mot;In bed, very quickly, after being sick for only t;
quot;No, no, I mean t? Did to cs?quot;
quot;Anns in your mind?quot; cried my mot;t man seventy years. does it matter ;
I al it mattered, to kno possible t can o you, to knoo not be draerrors t surrounded our cil s dark corner of ill tcil s.
As I remember it, t in our old ried to from me. S ypes of key locks. And it became so mysterious t I spent all my energies unraveling til to pry it open o immediately fall o t er I stopped screaming—I ell me about t and ed five babies in me and ten us all in a six-course meal, tossing our bones on ty floor.
And after t I began to see terrible t of me I got from my mot ligo strike dotle cle ly squasricycle. And sc. Monkey rings t in tet could splas of laughing friends.
I didnt tell anyone about t even my mot people didnt kno. Clair. sa I looked like my fate at time. But if t ts. Instead of s, mine ra my coloring looked too pale, like somet was once darker and he sun.
And my eyes, my motern cuts of a s knife. I used