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Story postcard – the bones of the story (2)

Tonderai ignores the moaning wind and continues.

“At the Table, the chairs can no longer hold Grandpa’s Favourites for they have grown too fat. A few of them see that this is being noticed, and not in a good way, so they decide to vanish.

Girl watches their fat bottoms as they try to wriggle out of the windows, but not all of them make it. Some of them, the unlucky ones, now have pockets so heavy, so crammed with gold and diamonds, lithium and US dollars, that they cannot reach high enough, fast enough, and so they do not escape. Even worse for them, when Grandpa hears their squeals, he sends his soldiers to fetch them back. Then these unfortunate Favourites do vanish, but not in the ways they had hoped to.”

“So, this is how it goes until one morning there is a big shock for Girl.” Tonderai moves closer to the fire, his jaw clenching and unclenching, as he sizzles the story into the dark, each word sparking like a half-lit fuse.

“This shock, this sadness that happens to Girl is on the morning that she goes for a long walk, a new walk, to the other side of the House to think about the stories she must tell. Girl has never been to this place in the House before, so she is excited to see it now. She walks as she always does – sometimes skipping, sometimes stopping, always thinking, thinking of stories. But, on this day, just as she reaches the far corner, she trips on a pile of loose shapes.

‘Oooo …’ Sorry for that! She lifts one foot up, and hops on the other. She stops to look down.”

Tonderai, leans on the billiard table and lifts up the sole of one of his gumboots. He peers around as though to examine it, and then he lets it fall back with a splash.

“‘What are these things? Wood?’” he cries, his voice mimicking that of a young girl. “‘No, they are too white. And their shape is wrong.’ Girl bends down to look more closely, and then she cries out again, for she sees that these shapes are not wood. They are Bones. These are the Bones of skeletons. She spins around.

‘Whose are these bones? Who lives here?’

At first she cannot see anybody, and then she sees eyes gleaming, their backs to the wall. The eyes are big. They are sad and silent, and they stare at her from the half dark. The eyes belong to the old men and old women, who sit in a circle, holding their grandchildren close.”

Now Tonderai takes a few hobbling steps, then he stops. When he speaks again, his voice is so soft, that Rudd has to lean forward to hear him better.

“Girl limps across to speak to them, but the old people shrink back as she approaches. She stops. She tries to remember. And then it comes to her. ‘This must be it. This must be that place. These must be the Buried Lives.’ Suddenly Girl knows that these are the Bones that she heard the Elders whisper about long, long ago. These are the Bones of the Lost.”

Copyright Georgie Knaggs & The Phraser 2023

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