Akoot Famous Writers 
The Pact
                   
 
We played dolls in that house where Father staggered with the 
Thanksgiving knife, where Mother wept at noon into her one ounce of 
cottage cheese, praying for the strength not to 
kill herself. We kneeled over the 
rubber bodies, gave them baths 
carefully, scrubbed their little 
orange hands, wrapped them up tight, 
said goodnight, never spoke of the 
woman like a gaping wound 
weeping on the stairs, the man like a stuck 
buffalo, baffled, stunned, dragging 
arrows in his side. As if we had made a 
pact of silence and safety, we kneeled and 
dressed those tiny torsos with their elegant 
belly-buttons and minuscule holes 
high on the buttock to pee through and all that 
darkness in their open mouths, so that I 
have not been able to forgive you for giving your 
daughter away, letting her go at 
eight as if you took Molly Ann or 
Tiny Tears and held her head 
under the water in the bathinette 
until no bubbles rose, or threw her 
dark rosy body on the fire that 
burned in that house where you and I 
barely survived, sister, where we 
swore to be protectors. 
 
Written by Sharon Olds
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