Shahen
I wake before dawn
to church bells,
an urgent shake.
Mama, Papa, a goat,
and the butchering knife.
Papa says, “Bring your sisters to the highest field.
Tell them you are checking on the sheep.
Don’t come back
unless we come for you.
Wait till it quiets,
then go south
to Aleppo.
“Stay high in the mountains,
heading southwest
till you see the desert
from the ridge.
Be careful when you cross the Euphrates.
Trust no one
till Aleppo.
Find the Forty Martyrs Church.
The
Soorp Hayr
there
helped your
keri
get to New York.”
He holds me for one second.
He wakes the girls.
Mama wraps a vest around me,
pulls me close in one motion, saying,
“Wear this.
It will keep you full
and safe.”
My head fits
into the curve
between Mama’s head and body.
We pull in one breath together.
She pushes me away, looks me right in the eyes.
“You are very young to be a man.
Take good care of your sisters.
Now go.”
Mama wraps Sosi and Mariam
each in a new vest,
her hug squeezing
all breath from them.
Papa pulls her back,
puts Mariam in my arms,
adds a double knot
to the laces of the
charukh
enveloping her feet.
“Go now. They are coming.”
“Who?” Mariam says.
Mama takes the pot from the table.
Papa pushes us through the door.
Mama follows.
Papa grips the goat and the knife.
Summer is here, but words
from springtime last year
come out from deep inside me.
“Let’s see who can get to the sheep first.
Misak and Kevorg
said we have new lambs.”
Sosi looks back at Mama and Papa,
then at me.
“We’ll be back!” she says.
She grabs the black pot from Mama
and starts to run.
I run.
Sosi runs.
Mariam whimpers
as I squeeze her too tight,
her ear pressed to my chest,
her legs around my waist.
Behind us we hear the squeal
of the butchering of a goat,
followed by the death quiet.
I hear Mama
running toward the river screaming.
“My girls, my beloved girls,
how could you kill them?
You should have killed me instead.”
We hear more screams
and sounds of guns from far away.
We hear soldiers near Mama.
We hear Mama’s sounds
like an animal.
We hear Papa, near Mama.
“No! You beasts! No!”
We hear soldiers and screams,
such screams.
We hear the sounds of our own breathing,
the sounds of our steps.
We run harder,
the noise of our hearts pounding,
blocking the sounds of home.
Footsteps, heart, and breath
fill our ears like rush of mill water at first thaw,
pushing up the mountain path,
our chests burning from the push,
in and out
legs up and down
our legs and hearts pounding
pounding
not stopping
till the top of the highest field.
Our ears fill with emptiness.
We drop to the ground.
I pull my sisters close together
behind the giant stone.
I find branches,
lean them against rock
to hide my sisters.
I crawl in
under branches
beside them.
They’re both wet
from sweat
and urine
that poured from them
while they ran
and ran.
We are safe.