Brought up Catholic in a rural town, crucifixes in every room of the house. Weekly traumatic recitations of sins to the confessional grate. Anne-Marie fled when she turned eighteen. In New York City she buried her head in anonymity: crowded streets and subways. Religion and family left behind, she savored freedom in the solitude of multitudes. Then came the call.
“Your father is dead. Don’t come home. It’s too late.”
So Anne-Marie simply went to bed . . . for days.
Until she found herself in a church. Walking down the aisle pushed by childhood memories. Muscle memory bent her knee in genuflection. At the communion rail, her hands appeared in front of her. Thin wafer received. Consumed. But then came wine? Since when? And the faint perfume from its chalice steals her resolve. She gulps as tears flow. Somehow, she’s back in the fold.

Written for Prosery Monday at dVerse, the virtual pub for poets around the globe. BUT, today, we write flash fiction!
Prosery is a form created by dVerse. A line from a poem is provided and we must include the line, word for word, within a piece of flash fiction of 144 words or less. The line provided today is
“And the faint perfume from its chalice steals ”
from the poem Sympathy by Paul Laurence Dunbar.
