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    Mercy

    Page 37
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      rape, puppets on the divine string. It was the play within the

      play; they too suffered; He loved them too; they too were

      children o f God; He toyed with them too; but we were

      D addy’s favorite girl. We had the holy scrolls; and a

      synagogue that faced towards Jerusalem, His city, cruel as is

      befitting; perpetual murder, as is befitting. The suicide at

      Massada was us, His best children, formed by His perfect

      love, surrendering: to Him. Annihilation is how I will love

      them; He loved loving; the freedom for us was the end o f the

      affair, finally dead. Yeah, we defied the Romans, a righteous

      suicide it seemed; but that was barely the point; we weren’t

      prepared to have them on top, we belonged to Him.

      Everything was hidden under the floor o f a cell that we had

      sealed off; to protect the holy scrolls from Roman desecration;

      to protect the synagogue from Roman desecration; we kept

      His artifacts pure and hidden, the signs and symbols o f His

      love; we died, staying faithful; only Daddy gets to hurt us bad;

      only Daddy gets to put His thing there. First we burned

      everything we had, food, clothes, everything; we gathered it

      all and we burned it. Then ten men were picked by lot and they

      slit the throats o f everyone else. Then one man was chosen by

      lot and he slit the throats o f the other nine, then his own. I have

      no doubt that he did. There were nearly a thousand o f us; nine

      hundred and sixty; men, women, children; proud; obedient to

      God. There was discipline and calm, a sadness, a quiet

      patience, a tense but quiet waiting for slaughter, like at night,

      how a child stays awake, waiting, there is a stunning courage,

      she does not run, she does not die o f fear. Some were afraid

      and they were held down and forced, o f course; it had to be. It

      was by family, mostly. A husband lay with his wife and

      children, restrained them, their throats were slit first, then his,

      he held them down, tenderly or not, and then he bared his

      throat, deluded, thinking it was manly, and there was blood,

      the w ay God likes it. There were some w idow s, some

      orphans, some lone folks you didn’t especially notice on a

      regular day; but that night they stood out; the men with the

      swords did them first. It took a long time, it’s hard to kill nearly

      a thousand people one by one, by hand, and they had to hurry

      because it had to be done before dawn, you can do anything in

      the dark but dawn comes and it’s hard to look at love in the

      light. We loved God and we loved freedom, we were all G o d ’s

      girls you might say and freedom, then as now, was in getting

      sliced; a perfect penetration, then death; a voluptuous compliance, blood, death. I f yo u ’re G o d ’s girl you do it the w ay He likes it and H e’s got special tastes; the naked throat and the

      thing that tears it open, He likes one clean cut, a sharp, clean

      blade; you lay yourself down and the blade cuts into you and

      there’s blood and pain; and the eyes, there’s a naked terror in

      the eyes and death freezes it there, yo u ’ve seen the eyes. The

      blood is warm and it spreads down over you and you feel its

      heat, you feel the heat spreading. Freedom isn’t abstract, an

      idea, it’s concrete, in life, a sliced throat, a clean blade,

      freedom now. G o d ’s girl surrenders and finds freedom where

      the men always bragged it was; in blood and death; only they

      didn’t expect it to be this w ay, them on their backs too, supine,

      girlish; G o d ’s the man here. There’s an esthetic to it too, o f

      course: the bodies in voluntary repose, waiting; the big knife,

      slicing; the rich, textured beauty o f the anguish against the

      amorphous simplicity o f the blood; the emotions disciplined

      to submission as murder comes nearer, the blood o f someone

      covers your arm or your shoulder or your hand and the glint o f

      the blade passes in front o f your eyes and you push your head

      back to bare your throat, slow ly so that you will live longer

      but it looks sensual and lewd and filled with longing, and he

      cuts and you feel the heat spreading, your body cools fast,

      before you die, and you feel the heat o f your own blood

      spreading. Was Sade God? M aybe I was just seventy; I was

      born on the rock but the adults who raised me were new to it

      and awkward, not native to the rock, still with roots down

      below, on softer ground; I died there, a tough one, old, tough

      skin from the awful sun, thick and leathery, with deep furrow s

      like dried up streams going up my legs and up my arms and

      creasing m y face, scarified you might say from the sun eating

      up m y skin, cutting into it with white hot light, ritual scars or a

      surgeon’s knife, terrible, deep rivers in my skin, dried out

      rivers; and maybe I’d had all the men, religion notwithstanding, men are always the same, filled with God and Law but still

      sticking it in so long as it’s dark and fast; no place on earth

      darker than Massada at night; no boys on earth faster than the

      Jew s; nice boys they were, too, scholars with the hearts o f

      assassins. Beware o f religious scholars who learn to fight.

      T h ey’ve been studying the morals o f a genocidal God. Shrewd

      and ruthless, smart and cruel, they will win; tell me, did

      Massada ever die and where are the Romans now; profiles on

      coins in museums. A scholar who kills considers the long

      view; will the dead survive in every tear the living shed? A

      scholar knows how it will look in writing; beyond the death

      count o f the moment. Regular soldiers who fight to kill don’t

      stand a chance. The corpses o f all sides get maggots and turn to

      dust; but some stories live forever, pristine, in the hidden

      heart. They prayed, the Jew ish boys, they made forays down

      the rock to fight the Romans until the military strength o f the

      Romans around the rock was unassailable, they took a little

      extra on the side when they could get it, like all men. I

      probably had m y eye on the younger ones, twenty, virile,

      new, they had no m emory o f being Jew s down on the low

      ground, they had only this austere existence, they were born

      here o f parents who were born here o f parents who either were

      born here or came here young and lived their adult years on

      this rock. Sometimes Jew s escaped the Romans and got here,

      made it to the top; but they didn’t bring profane ideas; they

      stripped themselves o f the foreign culture, the habits o f the

      invaders; they told us stories o f Roman barbarism, which

      convinced us even more; down below the Romans were pigs

      rolling in shit, above we were the people o f God. N o one here

      doubted it, especially not the young men; they were pure,

      glow ing, vibrant animals lit up by a nationalism that enhanced

      their physical beauty, it was a single-minded strength. There

      were no distracting, tantalizing memories o f before, below.

      We lived without the tumult o f social heterodoxy, there was

      no cultural relativism as it were. The young men were hard,

      cold animals, full o f self-referential pride; they had no


      ambivalence, no doubt; they had true grit and were incapable

      o f remorse; they lived in a small, contained world, geographically limited, flat, all the same, barren, culturally

      dogmatic, they had a few facts, they learned dogma by rote, it

      was a closed system, they had no need for introspection, there

      were no moral dilemmas that confronted them, troubled

      them, pulled them apart inside; they were strong, they fought,

      they prayed but it was a form o f nationalism, they learned

      racial pride, they had the thighs o f warriors, not scholars, and

      they used them on women, not Romans, it was the common

      kind o f killing, man on girl, as i f by being Jew s alone on this

      desolate rock, isolated here, they were, finally, like everyone

      else, all the other men, ordinary, like Romans, for instance;

      making war on us, brutal and quick if not violent, but they

      beat women too, the truth, finally, they did. The sacred was

      remote from them except as a source o f national pride; pure

      Je w s on a purely Jew ish rock they had a pure God o f the Jew s,

      His laws, H oly Books, the artifacts o f a pure and superior

      nation. The rock was barren and empty and soon it would be a

      cemetery and the bloodletting would become a story; nearly

      fiction, nearly a lie; abridged, condensed, cleaned up; as if

      killing nine hundred and sixty people, men, women, and

      children, by slicing their throats was an easy thing, neat and

      clean, simple and quiet; as if there was no sex in it and no

      meanness; as if no one was forced, held down, shut up; well,

      frankly, murdered; as i f no one was murdered; as if it was

      noble and perfect, a bloodless death, a murderless murder, a

      mass suicide with universal consent, except for the women

      and the children; except for them. Y ou get sad, if you

      understand. The men were purely male, noble and perfect, in

      behalf o f all the Jew s; the young ones especially, strong

      animals, real men, prideful men, physically perfect specimens

      dark and icy with glistening thighs, ideologically pure,

      racially proud, idealists with racial pride; pure, perfect,

      uncorrupted nationalists; beautiful fascists; cold killing boys;

      until God, ever wise, ever vicious, turned them into girls. I

      was probably an old woman making a fool o f herself with

      memories and desires, all the natural grace and learned artifice

      o f young women burned away by wear and tear and the awful,

      hot sun. Still, sometimes you’d like to feel one o f the young

      ones against you, a last time, one last time; nasty, brutish,

      short. It’s a dumb nostalgia. They never were very good, not

      the fathers, not the sons. O r maybe I was some sentimental old

      fool w h o ’d always been a faithful wife, except once, I was

      lonely and he was urgent, and I had a dozen grandchildren so

      this rock knew m y blood already, I had labored here, and now

      I sat, old, under the sun, and m y brain got heated with

      foresight and grief and I saw them as they soon would be,

      corpses with their throats slit, and maybe I howled in pain, an

      animal sound, or I denounced them in real words, and the

      young men said she’s an old fool, she’s an old idiot, she’s

      loony, ignore her, it’s nonsense, and I tried to tell the girls and

      the children how they’d be killed soon, with the awful slice

      across the throat; these are fanatic boys, I said, driven by an

      idea, I said, it is murder, not suicide, what they will do to you;

      and they asked if it was the will o f God and o f course now I see

      w hy you must lie but I said yes, it’s His will, always, that we

      should suffer and die, the will o f God is wrong, I said, we have

      to defy the will o f God, we have to defy the Romans and the

      Je w s and the will o f God, we have to find a w ay to live, us, you

      see, us; she’s loony, they said; you’ll be stretched out, I said,

      beautiful and young, too soon, dressed and ornamented, and

      your throats will be naked as if your husbands are going to use

      your mouths but it will be a sword this time, a real one, not his

      obscene bragging, one clean cut, and there will be blood, the

      w ay God likes. I didn’t want to see the children die and I was

      tired o f God. Enough, I said to Him; enough. I didn’t want to

      see the wom en die either, the girls who came after me, you get

      old and you see them different, you see how sad their

      obedience is, how pitiful; you see them whole and human,

      how they could be; you see them chipped aw ay at, broken bit

      by bit, slowed down, constrained; tamed; docile; bearing the

      weight o f invisible chains; you see it is terrible that they obey

      these men, love these men, serve these men, who, like their

      God, ruin whatever they touch; don’t believe, I say, don’t

      obey, don’t love, let him put the sword in your hand, little

      sister, let Him put the sword in your hand; then see. Let him

      bare his throat to you; then see. The day before it happened I

      quieted down, I didn’t howl, I didn’t rant or rave, I didn’t

      want them to lock me up, I wanted to stay out on the rock,

      under the hot sun, the hot, white sun; m y companion, the

      burning sun. I was an old woman, wild, tough, proud, strong,

      illiterate, ah, yes, the people o f the Book, except for the

      women and girls, God says it’s forbidden for us, the Book,

      illiterate but I wanted to write it down today, quiet, in silence,

      not to have to howl but to curl up and make the signs on the

      page, to say this is what I know, this is what has happened

      here, but I couldn’t write, or read; I was an old woman, tough,

      proud, strong, fierce, quiet now as if dumb, a thick quiet, an

      intense, disciplined quiet; I was an old woman, wild, tough,

      proud, with square shoulders muscled from carrying, from

      hard labor, sitting on a rock, a hard, barren rock, a terrible

      rock; there was a wom an sitting on a rock, she was strong, she

      was fierce, she was wild, she wasn’t afraid, she looked straight

      ahead, not down like wom en now , she was dark and dirty,

      maybe mad, maybe just old, near naked with rags covering

      her, her hair was long and shining and dirty, a gleaming silver

      under the hot, white sun; but wild is perhaps not the right

      word because she was calm, upright, quiet, in intentional

      solitude, her eyes were big and fearless and she faced the world

      head-on not averting her eyes the w ay women do now; she

      could see; she didn’t turn her eyes away. She was sitting on a

      hard, barren rock under a hot, white sun, and then the sun

      went down, got lower in the sky, lower and lower yet, a little

      lower; the sun got lower and the light got paler, then duller;

      the sun got low and she took a piece o f rock, a sharp piece o f

      rock, and she cut her throat; I cut my throat. N o Romans; no

      fascist Jew ish boys however splendid their thighs or pristine

      their ideals; no. Mine was a righteous suicide; a political refusal

      to sanction the current order; to say black was white. Theirs

      was mass murder. A child can’t commit suicide. You have to

      murder a child. I co
    uldn’t watch the children killed; I couldn’t

      watch the women taken one last time; throats bared; heads

      thrown back, or pushed back, or pulled back; a man gets on

      top, who knows what happens next, any time can be the last

      time, slow murder or fast, slow rape or fast, eventual death, a

      surprise or you are waiting with a welcome, an open

      invitation; rape leading, inexorably, to death; on a bare rock,

      invasion, blood, and death. Massada; hear my heart beat; hear

      me; the women and children were murdered, except me, I was

      not, when you say Massada you say m y name, I discovered

      pride there, I outlined freedom, out from under, Him and him

      and him; let him put the sword in your hand, little sister, then

      see; don’t love them; don’t obey. It wasn’t delirium; or fear; I

      saw freedom. Does Massada thrill you, do you weep with

      pride and sorrow for the honor o f the heroes, the so-called

      suicides? Then you weep for me, I make you proud, the

      woman on the rock; a pioneer o f freedom; a beginning; for

      those who had no say but their throats were ripped open; for

      the illiterate in invisible chains; a righteous suicide; a resistance

      suicide; mad woman; mad-dog suicide; this girl here’s got a

      ripped throat, Andrea, the zealot, freedom is the theory,

      suicide the practice; m y story begins at Massada, I begin there,

      I see a woman on a rock and I was born in blood, the blood

      from her throat carried by time; I was born in blood, the slit

      between the legs, the one God did H im self so it bleeds forever,

      one clean cut, a perfect penetration, the m emory o f Massada

      marked on me, my covenant with her; God sliced me, a

      perfect penetration, then left me like carrion for the others, the

      ones He made like Him, in His own image as they always say,

      as they claim with pride, or vanity I would say, or greed; pride

      is me, deciding at Massada, not Him or him or him. Y o u ’re

      born in blood, washed in it, you swim out in it, immersed in

      it, it’s your first skin, warm , hot on fragile, wrinkled,

      discolored flesh; w e’re born to bleed, the ones He sliced

     


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