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The Hedge Woman
There’s a woman that’s standing as tall as the trees
With eyes made of flowers and skin made of leaves
And she’s two times the height of the roofs and the eaves
Wherever you are,
No matter how far,
You can still glimpse her flowing green sleeves.
And there’s no way that somebody trimmed her by hand
She was most likely grown up and out of the land
But her details look so suspiciously planned -
Nothing natural there
In her perfect green hair,
in the way she’s so carefully grand.
If you want to reach her, then it’ll take days
The forest’s enchanted, the air is a haze
But at some point you’ll get there, adrift in a daze
The flowers so sweet,
You’ll stand at her feet
…And right there, there’s a door to a maze.
You’ll think, “Oh, how strange,” as you walk through the door -
In an instant, the world’s not the same as before
The inside expands, reaching up, floor to floor
There are tunnels and rooms
And untamable blooms
A whole hidden world to explore.
In each little room, something different grows
There’s a bathroom where every tile is a rose
One closet is full of chrysanthemum clothes
There’s hydrangea utensils
And peony pencils
And pollen that torments your nose.
And you’ll wander in wonder for hour after hour
Mentally writing down every new flower
So awestruck by this otherworldly power
You lose track of time,
You continue to climb
Til you land at the top of the tower.
One wall looks just like the inside of a face
So you must be exploring the woman’s headspace
But you can’t find the flowers, not even a trace.
You see metal supplies,
Some hedge trimmers and dyes
…You don’t feel good in this place.
There are tables with scissors beside crooked stems
And microscoped flowers inspected like gems
And nothing is growing, not-
“Hello?”
you whirl around.
and there in the corner, is a girl.
you see her hair first -
it’s full, dark, but knotted,
tangled with snippets of greenery,
and you wonder-
“what are you doing here?” she asks, stepping closer, almost a tiptoe.
you say “i- i didn’t know there was someone here- who are you?”
she tenses, coiled like a vine, then replies, “i’m the groundskeeper.”
she says it so ordinarily for such unordinary grounds. you try out the question - “and what is this place?”
she sighs.
“this is the gift that i got from the wood.
she planted herself in the ground where i stood.
she grew me much more than i realized she could
and she made me a deal:
if i made her real,
then she swore to make my whole world good.
so i gave her her beauty, i trimmed from inside
i built and i sculpted and tended and dyed
i wrapped and i colored, i knotted and tied
and the next thing i knew,
the taller she grew,
and she’s visible now far and wide.”
you look at her, stunned.
“but all this- is it real, then?”
and she reaches over to the microscope,
takes the flower,
rubs it between her fingers, gingerly,
and says “kind of.”
you grab it from her,
and it feels real at first,
but then there’s this smell,
the sweet muck of wanting,
of peat and rot and death
bleeding into your skin,
chemical, and stinging,
burning your hand,
your fingertips, going red and pruny -
you gasp and drop it.
the girl’s hands are red as roses.
you whisper, “does it hurt?”
reluctantly, she nods.
You take those burned hands in yours and say, “Let’s get out of here, okay? Go somewhere else? Get some bandages?” And you mean it.
but she yanks away,
and her voice is full of thorns,
“you realize i can’t just abandon the ground.
i am part of this place, i am tied, i am bound
i am beautiful here, i am loved, i am found
and not everyone else has a green thumb, you know
not everyone sees that disguises can grow
from the earth, flourishing and alive even though
they’re not real, nothing’s real, everybody’s a hedge
and everyone’s life’s on a leaf trimmer’s edge
it isn’t my fault that i learned how to fledge
and no one can know that i look like i do
please don’t let them see past the beauty i grew
please let them believe that their legend is true
please don’t make me leave, i’m begging you.”
You stare at her long and hard,
Trying to cut her open,
Pluck the clippers and dyes out of her skull,
Stuff it full of flowers, real flowers
Roses that won’t burn
And pollen that won’t poison
And seeds that won’t sprout
That won’t bloom and burst out
Through her nose and her mouth
Spewing anger and doubt
You just want to hold her
But somehow you know
That to keep yourself safe
You just have to go.
So you walk down those blooming spiral stairs,
Past the bathrooms, closets, kitchens,
And in the rustling leaves, there is a whisper,
Begging you to stay,
Begging you to help.
So you’ve met the woman a hundred feet tall
The wonders are big, but their hearts are so small
And someday you know that the sculpture will fall
When the winds start to turn
And the air starts to burn
And the whole world will learn
But until then, you’ll yearn
For the life you were living in thrall,
When you didn’t know flowers at all.
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Written on 4/14/2022.