Mummies and Then They Were Gone, tan-renga poem by Genie Nakano and Dean Okamura at Spillwords.com
Circe Denyer

Mummies And Then They Were Gone

Mummies and Then They Were Gone

written by: Genie Nakano and Dean Okamura

@genieyogini

 

lost little girl in the
Museo de las Momias
night approaches
she runs faster and faster
in the wrong direction

a strange odor
seeps from the walls
burning her nostrils
stagnant scents flowing from
the hall of antiquities

mummies in a row
bodies twisted and stretched
stand at attention
dried parched limbs twitch
begin swelling with new life

the young girl is not
afraid merely mesmerized
as if knowing
they are telling stories
both sad and interesting

a river of tears falling
from the mummies eyes
she realizes
why she is here, a witness
a conduit to set them free

only for the poor
forsaken burials
their cries
shaking the room with sorrow
their tears flood the floor

moldy strings
lose their grip on the mummies
they break away
she falls into a deep sleep
as liberated spirits dance

And then they were gone.

 

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR:

In two thousand fifteen, I visited the Mummy Museum in Guanajuato. It haunted me — until Dean Okamura and I wrote this tanka series together. His ending is liberating.

Latest posts by Genie Nakano (see all)
Latest posts by Dean Okamura (see all)
Subscribe to our Newsletter at Spillwords.com

NEVER MISS A STORY

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER AND GET THE LATEST LITERARY BUZZ

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.