You sit at a desk, like ones you’ve seen before,
open the folder of all those who informed on you—
and eyes spill out, so many eyes. Brown ones,
blues, green, so many. The eyes of neighbours,
teachers, co-workers, cousins and uncles…friends.
You recognize them all. Even those of that odd
kid met in Komsomol. They gather on the floor
around your ankles as they fall, open wide, boring
into you. Some you expected, even greet with a nod.
Others lack the decency to look away in shame.
And then you open the other file, one you made
over years, sitting across cigarette haze,
and there is one final pair of eyes,
the only one to move, looking everywhere,
and blame gets choked down like bile—
you recognize them as your own,
and suddenly, you’re blind.
M. Benjamin Thorne is an Associate Professor of Modern European History at Wingate University. Possessed of a lifelong love of history and poetry, he is interested in exploring the synergy between the two. His poems appear or are forthcoming in Rogue Agent, Feral, Gyroscope Review, Molecule, Red Eft Review, and Thimble Lit Mag. He lives and sometimes sleeps in Charlotte, NC.