I Was Mistaken for One of Hers

I stepped into the gardens
not looking for Gods -
just air,
the trees did not mind.
The trees did not ask my name.
The gravel path did not need my weight explained.
I walked as if I had always belonged to the green
and the bronze.
There was a hush in the hedges,
not silence, but breath held
in the throat of something ancient.
I did not disturb it.
Somewhere a doe stepped sideways
into the mirror of the pond
and did not break it.
There were statues with weather-soft mouths
and stone eyes that never blink.
One of them watched me
like she was waiting to see
if I would bow or vanish.
I passed a statue of Artemis,
bow unstrung,
ankles mid-step,
and I thought:
she looks like a girl
who once refused to smile
and was punished for it forever.
There were nymphs carved near her,
their faces smoothed with time,
eyes blurred as if they’ve watched
a thousand women come here
trying not to cry
in public.
I think they mistook me
for a nymph who got away.
The kind who washed blood from her ankles
in a fountain no one remembers,
and kept walking
until her name was stardust.
They called her Echo once,
but she never answered.
I touched a petal
and it curled toward me
like it knew my grief
by another name.
I touched a stone column
and felt it hum.
Like it knew
I didn’t come here to bloom,
but to hide
without shrinking.
No one called me back.
Not even the goddess.
But I left with dirt on my hands
and the sense
that I had passed.
About the Creator
venusianjade
scientist, dreamer, lover, cryptid, mythmaker.



Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.