ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote in [community profile] rainbowfic2013-10-11 08:55 pm

Poem: "Watching the Baby Sleep"

Name: [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Title: "Watching the Baby Sleep"
Story: Monster House
Characters: None named
Colors: Moonlight #11 Billow
Supplies and Styles: None
Word count: 364
Rating: PG
Warnings: Nightmares
Summary: Having a new baby makes for restless sleep.
Notes: Feedback is welcome.


"Watching the Baby Sleep"


The house is dark and quiet,
even the monster-under-the-bed
snoozing peacefully.

It's hard to sleep
when you're a new parent.

When you lie down
and try to get some rest,
the baby cries,
and you drag yourself
to the nursery for the nightly dance
of diaper-checking and bottle-offering.

When you lie down, again,
in the cooling nest of your bed,
the dreams come --
dreams of the baby crying
that you wake to answer
only to hear silence;
dreams of the baby gone missing
that bring you running into the nursery
only to find the tiny form
curled peacefully in the crib.

So you wind up spending a lot of time
standing in the velveteen shadows of pre-dawn
watching the baby sleep, fist curled tight against rosebud lips.
while the curtains billow gently in the breeze.

In a house like this,
it can be hard to tell
what's just a dream
and what might be
a real hazard.

This is the fear that I whisper
into the dimness of my daughter's room.

The lurking shadow peels away from the wall
and slips out in search of someone more reassuring,
then comes back towing a sleepy bogeyman
with his white silk hair standing up in tufts.

He gives me a matter-of-fact pat on the shoulder,
sprinkles the floor of the nursery
with a mixture of flour and mustard seed,
then shoos me gently back to bed.

A few hours later, the sun is up
and there are no nightmare hoofprints
nor clawmarks from demons
nor tracks of any other kind;
and nothing caught counting mustard seeds.

The bogeyman smiles at me
with his shark-bright teeth,
assures me that my dreams are only dreams,
and goes to get a dustpan.

My wife kisses me on the cheek,
picks up our daughter for breakfast,
and tells me to go back to bed.

I go,
and the bed is warm
and welcoming,
and it does not take long at all
to fall back asleep.

If there's one thing I've learned
from living in a mixed household, it's this:

when the bogeyman tells you
there's nothing to worry about,
it's generally true.
bookblather: A picture of Yomiko Readman looking at books with the text "bookgasm." (Default)

[personal profile] bookblather 2013-10-13 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
Awwww, a bogeyman protecting a child-- that's a lovely little inversion.