Poem: Subsequent Kingdom

Photo Credit: Heiko Müller, the formidable German Surrealist Painter
The hour came

When she no longer knew

Where to stand and so

She sat

In the middle of a ground

Hollowed of movement

And sound.

Wrapped her arms around

The tops of her knees,

Squeezed and held

Herself in a balance

That felt like a trance.

Faded memories danced,

Then turned into smoke,

Lifted up

And away—

Transformed day into

Night,

Where what was bright

Had taken flight.

There was no way

To know for sure

Where her plight would

Take her

Or send her next

But to a dream—

So she slept and found

That nightmares abound,

But dreams are the things

Worth stepping into.

And so

She slept

And she stepped.


She entered—

Her feet soaked in regret,

A substance heavier than she knew.

Underfoot,

Leaves crunching,

Small souls darting,

Dripping mysteries and dew.


She stood in a hidden forest

Where light was shattered

By shadow—

The sun trickling

Down tree trunks

Until devoured by shade.


In this place—

Where light and dark collide—

Life breathed

Without fear of

Being censured

Or scrutinized.


Her hands trembled,

Adding vibration to the breeze

Shaken loose from unseen clouds,

Wrapping around her skin

And seeping past

Petrified courage within.


Location undisclosed—

To she and he and me.

Lost inside—

No fear of being unfound,

No regret of being drowned

Between the monotony there

And this rising cacophony of sound—

Increasing swells surrounding,

Like a riptide racing outward,

Tearing her loose from security,

Crowning her

With confounding obscurity.

A subsequent Queen

Bowed low—

In coronation,

Surrendered to unpredictability,

Relinquished proposals

And control.


Her scepter raised,

Exposing the cavity

Of beating heart and soul,

Warring against

Encroaching enemies

Threatening to bring her low.


She breathed.

She sighed.

She caught the eyes

Of a creature drawing near.

In him—a revelation

She held dear,

Yet sensed she should not go near.

Stuck

Between stimulus

And choice—

As thick as tangled underbrush below,

As wide as these grounds

She did not know—

She stood still.

A stabbing thrill

Entered her side,

Some kind of alive

Breaching the tenderness

Of the space

Where her secrets hide.


She lowered her scepter,

Compelled to disavow

The tenacity of her presence here—

In a place

Perhaps she should fear.

There he stood,

Quite near.

Treading upon this undisclosed ground

Gave air to her footsteps,

And she, like a child,

Laid her focus

At the feet of he

And of mysteries

Surrounding her there—

She worshiped at the altar

Of her long-forgotten

Sense of wonder.


Unexpected places.

Unimagined faces.

Unforeseen encounters

Reminded her that life

Is an unpredictable force—

Impossible to bridle

By will alone.

“Let it be,”

Said she—

With an indignant air

Of possibility,

A heaviness in her lungs

Making it difficult to breathe—

Yet she breathed,

And she sighed,

And she moved into his realm,

Stuck her fingers in,

And pried him open—

Revealing his positives

To her negatives.


A Pandora’s Box

Of magnetism—

Cataclysmic exposure,

Volcanic disclosure—

Blasted through their chests

And up through

The tops of the trees.

A burst of what was unseen

Careened,

Trading winds

With all that was seen—

A hurricane of chemistry,

Unforeseen,

Destroying the routine

Like a machine

Come to life

With a sharpened pulse.

She realized too late

That being crowned

In her dream

Unbound her stream

Of waking consciousness—

Stuck now inside her sleep,

Between worlds,

Stewing in a concoction

Of waking memory

And present dream.


She remembered when

She had a choice—

When she sat

With her arms wrapped

Around her knees,

A breeze of normalcy

Blowing across

Tear-stained cheeks:

“The tears I knew

Were softer

Than these torrents

Where light and dark

Steal what was—

What is—

And twist the present

With what they undo.”


The hour returned.

She no longer knew

Where the path of her then

Met the path of her now.

So she sat with her crown,

Awaiting sundown—

Her sleeping life

Mingling within

Her subsequent kingdom.


© Jill Szoo Wilson, updated 2026

Unknowable: An Allegory

“Do you think we are unknowable?” she asked.

Caimon looked down at the dirt around his feet and noticed his shoe was untied. “Not completely, no.”

“Do you mean that we are partly unknowable? But partly knowable, too?”

He could feel his pulse in his temples as he bent down to tie his shoe, “I think we can know someone as much as they are willing to be known.”

She wondered about his answer as she leaned over to tighten the Velcro on the side of her own shoe, “Do you want me to know you?” She whispered the first part of the sentence, but the second part leapt too loudly from her mouth.

“I guess I want everyone to know me.   But not really.” He could tell, right away, this wasn’t the answer she wanted to hear.

“Well,” she said, with securely fastened feet, “I think I understand.”

Caimon tried to make a joke, but it fell between his feet, “Maybe you do. But not really.”

As his paltry attempt at humor mixed in with the dirt beneath the hem of his pants, Caimon wanted her to walk away. He didn’t like the weight of her stare, and he didn’t want to feel responsible for her anymore. In a moment of desperation, Caimon turned from her—filled with the conviction that he would never look in her direction again—and he said, “Why do you always need to know? What is wrong with not knowing?”

His footsteps were slow and heavy as he could feel her blue eyes fastened to his back with long, thick ropes tied around his organs. Her eyes pulled at him and tried to stop his movement until, between one exhale and the next breath in, he felt her release. The moment of her imprisonment was the moment of his freedom, and in his freedom, he began to run. Not fast and with nowhere to go, but with the swiftness of a man whose shoes were tied and whose longest mistake grew shorter behind him.

Caimon ran with his secrets. The unknowable parts of himself were rattling around between his right ear and his left. They were sloshing back and forth between his rib cages and percolating up into his throat. The words he would never say, the feelings he could never explain, and the courage he conjured in his dreams but left stuck to the sides of his imagination were loosening with each new footstep. He wondered whether it was dangerous to allow the movement. His secrets felt like gumballs in a gumball machine and he had only ever seen one fall at a time: what would happen if the whole lot was disturbed at once?

He laughed under his breath and panted fog into the cold night air, “If only I had a quarter, I could find some courage to chew on.”

He laughed again, but this time he knew it wasn’t funny.

The words of the girl wrote themselves on the trees surrounding him, and he could hear them on the wings of the wind that fell through the leaves. He watched his shoes as they hit the ground—left, right, left, right—and he began to count the steps. Each step was further away and, somehow, closer, too. Further from her: closer to something new.

It wasn’t any one aspect of the girl Caimon needed to flee, but the anchor her whole had become. She needed Caimon, and Caimon didn’t want to be needed. She expected things from him, and he wasn’t sure he had what she was waiting to discover. He didn’t want to disappoint her, to lose her, or find her, and the girl only wanted to be found. Theirs was a connection of two negative magnets, one wanting to change her charge. She wanted to change the nature of herself so she could be pulled into Caimon and he into her, almost as though the choice no longer belonged to them.

“Unknowable,” he read as the words wrote themselves in the reflection of a lake up ahead. Caimon stopped running and never looked back, but sat on the edge of the water.

The air was so cold by then that his breath felt like crystals grabbing the edges of his lips as it was blown from his body. The forest was silent and still: the kind of stillness that lowers itself like a parachute over nature when the moon is moments away from switching places with the sun.

Caimon, tired and cold, reached into the pocket of his coat to find his book of matches. Once he was certain the matches were there, he looked near his feet for pieces of fallen wood. One by one, Caimon reached into the dirt for the wood, methodically like he was looking for pieces of a puzzle that had fallen to the floor. Once he had gathered enough wood to build a fire, he reached into his pocket and pulled out two things: the matches he knew were there and an envelope she had given him earlier, long before he tied his shoe.

Caimon crumpled the envelope—still filled with her letter—in his left hand and placed it on top of the wood. With a match in his right hand, Caimon struck the side of the matchbook and watched the flame immediately appear.

“Quickly,” Caimon thought. “It is quickly that a match is filled with fire.” Just as the flame crept dangerously close toward his fingers, Caimon leaned over and watched as the flame stretched itself from the match to the letter, like a bridge between two lovers. Or two strangers. Once the letter was lit, Caimon stood.

He closed his eyes and felt the heat of the letter begin to grow as it linked arms with the pieces of wood he had gathered from the forest floor. Soon, the fire began to melt the breath that gently rolled from between Caimon’s lips. He lightly bent his fingers into fists, his fingertips touching the inside of his own palm. He felt the skin on his hands and wondered why he hadn’t noticed before how rough that skin had become.

He could see on the inside of his eyelids the orange and red of the fire he had built: the fire made with his rough hands and matches and her letter. He didn’t want to look at it just yet but, instead, he wanted to feel it dance before him like a lover unencumbered by self-consciousness or pride. Caimon drank in the light and let the colors of the illumination paint a masterpiece inside his mind.

Enraptured by the freedom of the flames and the heat of the fire against his shoes and legs and face, Caimon leaned back his head and sighed a message that flew into the sky, “There is nothing wrong with not knowing.”

And without seeing the sun begin to rise, Caimon knew the day was new.

© Jill Szoo Wilson, 2025

This story was inspired by German painter Heiko Müller’s piece, The Inner Light http://www.heikomueller.de