Chorus:
The island of Cyprus has always
kept its secrets
Guilty
words of little kids, sentences of the elder,
in sealed
lips they were trapped of sovereign crowds.
The story
we are about to tell took place in a Mesaoria village
yet the unmerciful
wind that blew along and through
delivered
it in handcuffs to all the island’s cape legs.
So here it
goes,
A mother
and a father both in unity and agreement
Have kept
their only daughter jailed
in their long
and narrow backyard
In an
adjacent barn
This
started when she was fourteen, #
indeed an
innocent child
she however
sincerely fell for the village’s most admired guy.
They eloped
in secrecy, to be together away of all
But it was
no time until Eleni’s father caught her beat her and all
And in one
night from midnight to dawn he.
- oh,
really, he -
-hit
Sophocles with an axe-
in front of her exploding eyes
and bloodied him
and she saw
she knows she saw
him
dead.
in front of her exploding eyes
and bloodied him
and she saw
she knows she saw
him
dead.
then shouting in frenzy
he beat Eleni to the brink of death
he beat Eleni to the brink of death
and locked
her in the barn
taking out the goats in middle night
taking out the goats in middle night
poor Eleni
forgot everything from day one,
They even say
she suffered amnesia from the hits
And in the
barn she knew nothing of who she was
Or why she
was there,
Or of her
soul’s torment.
The barn
had been her little world,
of hay for
a nap
Of little
food like beans and fried legumes
Of little
light from a tiny window
and Bible
tales from her mom.
There were
no chains around her ankles,
No rinks
around her wrists,
Just a
half-kilo padlock outside the one-metre door.
Window on
the door and rust had been Eleni’s friends,
And as the
rust was coming in, expanding on the inside,
“What are
you?”
Eleni’d ask
-But no answer
would she get-
She
imagined a snug dust of hope.
-But -
the shimming
smells of the carnations invading every morning
Were no
friends of hers, as they disturbed her gothic fiction.
In her
immaculate riddles she always answered back to the world outside
with her
smell of the enclosure
Familiar
smells, of mold, waste and ammonia.
and methane
from the rotten apples in the corner
the cats in
the backyard would cut from their only tree
and bring
them to her window.
she never
liked to eat those apples
yet never
threw them out either,
she - someone
would argue –
enjoyed the
cats’ attention.
So much the
methane got her dizzy
that
happiness she found in all this heavy prolonged misery
-years had
passed-
Then the
village newly-appointed priest
started
suspecting of all these,
when all
the neighbours had known for twenty years
And all
agreed -but one- that it was best for all
That she
was kept inside.
Sophocles
had a trusted friend
Who took an
oath for revenge
And that
Eleni would be free
To live and
love somebody.
He was the
one who made the priest suspect
When all
the others had been tricking him
about all
the smells and cries,
about the
secrecy of 13, Acheloou Str.
With him
the kids sometimes made up sounds
like the
ones Eleni made
But they
were always told off by their fathers
And so the
story went on,
Until one
day eleni heard a passing Caravan
Announcing
a children’s play of three acts.
Scene one:
(In the
barn, mother outside unlocking the door in difficulty, the padlock is very
heavy)
Eleni:
(weakly) Mum, is it you, mum?
Mother:
Yes, hold on a second to get this lock down, if I break it your dad’s gonna
kill us both!
Eleni: did
you bring me food?
Mother: Yes
Eleni: and
milk?
Mother: yes
Eleni: what
food?
Mother:
beans
Eleni:
again?
Mother:
it’s Friday. We fast.
Eleni: Mum,
you know I don’t like beans.
Mother: You always eat them.
Eleni: I
don’t like beans!
Mother: You
always eat them and you never complain!
Eleni: I
don’t like beans at all! (intensely) I hate them!
Mother: no
you don’t! You don’t hate them! I watch you eat them every time with such
passion!
[pause]
Eleni: I
heard something today…
Mother:
What is it with you today?
Eleni:
(repeating in internal tone and moving her head back and forth) I heard
something today, I heard something today, I heard something today, I heard
something today
Mother: Stop
it! I don’t see you eat, I’ll go and get you some bread today, drink your milk
and I’ll be right back
Eleni: I
heard something today, (fading as the mother leaves) I heard something today…
(TO BE CONTINUED)