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Lagom

Real Poetic Secret Slave Narrative Challenge #1

By Kendall Defoe Published 2 years ago 2 min read
Lagom
Photo by JOHN TOWNER on Unsplash

From Real Poetic's challenge:

Let me tell you a story.

I know that Mr. Gordon would be really upset if he knew I was doing this, but what else can you do in the winter. It's a cold one, and I have somehow made off with a little paper and a pen I made on my own. Amazed what people will trade for just the chance to say something that will keep; something that will go one when I'm long gone.

My name is Lagom. Yeah, I know it sounds strange. I know what it means now and I have proof enough that this is what I should be called because I have a note that can't be erased.

Branding.

The moment they burned it into my arm - a much warmer day than this one - I would not let anyone forget it. Not the maids, the house servants, delivery boys and pickers with their fingers raw from cotton. They would know. And I was going to know something else.

Those letters...

When you are carrying things out for a family that barely reads, you can take a book and just enjoy yourself with those pages. I was the one they had to bring in fine plates and china and all that glittery stuff to eat with... And I never stole a thing. That's why they trusted me. That's why they kept me, too, especially when they saw how easily I could disappear into the background and do my duties. All that lifting made me strong, but it was what I was lifting that mattered the most.

Books, and books, and more books... Mr. Gordon gave his wife whatever she wanted, and she wanted to line all those shelves with 'the finest works of literature that the world had ever seen' (her line for the collection that took over one dusty room). I knew why she did this. A lost child in birth and no real interest in her man made her dependent on other things, like all those stories.

What I don't know is...why she taught me to read. Her husband would have beaten both of us senseless if he found out. Maybe she wanted to hear a child speak like the one she lost. Maybe having a slave who could read was a novelty (good word she taught me). Maybe she just was tired of staring at those books. She died without making this clear.

It was clear to me.

My name is Lagom - "just the right amount" or "not too much, not too little" - and I can read and see that I need to keep this secret, even as I write in the cold.

Power in the word

HistoricalMicrofictionShort Story

About the Creator

Kendall Defoe

Teacher, reader, writer, dreamer... I am a college instructor who cannot stop letting his thoughts end up on the page. No AI. No Fake Work. It's all me...

And I did this:

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Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

  1. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  2. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  3. Masterful proofreading

    Zero grammar & spelling mistakes

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Comments (16)

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  • Lamar Wiggins2 years ago

    Excellent piece, Kendall, the ending was especially poignant yet satisfying. I can't imagine being illiterate.

  • MatthewKusza2 years ago

    Very moving piece of writing. With few words, this short story conveyed so much about your characters! Excellent job!

  • Unlike the character in your story, I can’t read or write or type. I never learned, sadly. Great work! Enjoyed 😀

  • Shirley Belk2 years ago

    The power of the pen....and the gift of just enough. Beautiful

  • Mrs Gordon was so nice and kind. So happy for Lagom but sad because it has to be a secret. Loved your story!

  • B2 years ago

    You capture the way he treasures this gift so impeccably. Something we all take for granted, he holds like it's his most valued possession. <3

  • Your story was great, insightful, and I look forward to reading more from you.

  • And I would say this story itself is lagom: neither too much nor too little. Beautiful story, Kendall.

  • Randy Baker2 years ago

    Well crafted! This challenge from Real Poetic has inspired some great stories, yours included. And, I learned my Swedish word for the day!

  • Dana Crandell2 years ago

    Incredibly deep and multi-layered. Great job, Kendall!

  • Mark Gagnon2 years ago

    Historic fiction is one of my favorite genres, especially when it tells a story that could be more real than fiction like this one. Great story, Kendall! (I don't usually do this but if you enjoy this genera check out Dry Scrubbing if you have some time. It's during the same time.)

  • John Cox2 years ago

    Wonderful storytelling like always, Kendall. Stories within in the story, a mystery that cannot be solved and the untold treasure of books.

  • RP2 years ago

    My Jaw is on the floor!! So well done in such a short word count. Incredible and compelling story.

  • Daphsam2 years ago

    Well written. Very intense.

  • Leslie Writes2 years ago

    Well done. Great entry.

  • Intensely bittersweet; being both from the southern USA and living in a "Lagom" Swedish society, this truly got to me. Just the "right" to learn to read is so precious. I am grateful I am able to read such words as yours. Thanks you.

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