There once was a wordless
maid. Well, she wasn’t always
wordless. In fact, when she was a
child, she was neither wordless NOR a maid, can you believe that? But kids grow up and people become
maids and some of those maids become wordless.
As I implied, the wordless maid was
once a very chatty child. She
would blabber anything that came to mind to anyone who would listen. She talked so much that by the time she
was fifteen she was starting to seriously run out of things to say. Everyone she knew would complain about
her repeated stories and droning “insights.” She talked and spoke but no one ever really thought she
actually said anything.
When the wordless maid turned
seventeen, instead of pursuing her education like most, she entered into a maid
service. She befriended her fellow
employees and would talk and talk and blabber and blabber to them. One day, one of the maids who was
particularly sick of listening to the wordless maid drone on and on all the
while not say anything of any significance said to her “I really wish you
would stop talking unless you actually have something to say!”
It was if the wordless maid had had the
wind knocked out of her. She had
no idea anyone felt that way about her!
She didn’t know what to say!
She had no words. She was,
for the first time, speechless.
From that day on the wordless maid
never spoke another word. At
first, it was out of spite, but eventually she learned that even long after she
had forgiven the other maid for her remark, she really had nothing to say. Her opinions were redundant and
uninspired. Her observations were
obvious. Her life experience was
bland. She had nothing to
contribute. So simply, she never spoke.
The days turned into weeks, the
weeks into months, and the months into years. The wordless maid was wordless. All muscles involved in speech had deteriorated. Her tongue, once a muscular chubby
organ, was now a lifeless thin slab of meat, which rested gently on her lower
jaw.
One night, the wordless maid was
tidying up a room when she heard a piercing scream from outside. She went to the window and she saw a
woman running for her life as a man chased her with a steak knife. She could see the steak knife’s glint as
it caught light from the moon. The
man caught up to the woman and began to stab her repeatedly. The wordless maid wanted to scream and
yell for help, but she couldn’t.
No noise would erupt from her mouth, which was helplessly held wide
open.
Unable to scream for help, the wordless maid realized she could only watch. And that she did, for she could not look away.
And
now the wordless maid, who lived a sorrowing life, now leads one of not only
sorrow, but guilt.
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