I.
I do not blame Susan.
For who would leave a kingdom
to draw dark stocking lines on
backs of thighs for
dances with boys who never will
wrap fingers around sword's hilt?
The queen was always queen in Narnia
but growing girls cannot continually
believe their crowns to be gold,
and do not understand desire:
their own or others'.
The woman embraced by
a man in a gaudy crown of shiny
childish river-stone collections
will shine her crown brighter
or
she will collect river-stones herself.
And the woman with a golden crown
anticipating years to come of boys with no sense
of metallurgy
or alchemy
or kissing-
what will that queen do?
II.
Queens do not reign here.
They are tabloid covers
or men in tasteless dresses,
and since Susan would be neither she
puts her candor away
with her braids and all the other stylings of youth-
like gaudy gold crowns in a stony world.
Tiny black-haired woman
already grew up alone once,
no mother to explain how women count months;
now she can only count the days since she left home.
(This isn't home?)
Even an invisible crown on an invisible queen
is no use;
for no one will bow or even notice.
Susan studies their eyes.
She knows she will again be a beloved queen:
for once a queen,
always a queen.
But a queen must understand her subjects, as Susan knows well.
III.
They pay her homage at the castle gates,
bringing her carriages and flowers.
Sometimes she feels discourteous for denying them the hospitality of her hall,
but her bed is a child's bed,
too small to share.
Again: it has escaped her that
she is not that woman Rabadash pursued to Cair Paravel,
even if she can still feel the touch of his hand
and his wine-soaked breath upon her cheek.
Lucy,
perennially virgin,
does not know how to ask
why her sister studies her reflection,
searching for evidence of curves or crowns:
one of these, at least, will tell her if she is wanted
and why.
Susan knows the definition of irony:
she is fully aware how to grow a woman
but it is like studying a map of London
in the twisting closes of Edinburgh,
and her knowledge means nothing here. So
she spreads lipstick to mark her trail
to a destination she recalls
from another life.
IV.
Yes, blame Susan.
For who would give up the magic, the wonder,
for grasping young men who will never wrap fingers
around the hilt of a sword?
To linger behind for
saved-for silk stockings
and refuse the call so persistently echoing
in her siblings' minds; Susan cannot,
will not
look back at her girlhood.
It never told her how she would
recover what she lost.
(Su Pevensie was never as lovely
as the reflections of Queen Susan the Gentle: another
fault she will never forgive her youth for.
Queen Susan, however,
need never have existed.)
After Narnia, she had
never played at being a woman-
Her only pretense had been
hiding inside a girl's small body
as if she could even remember when
she was small enough to fit.
V.
Peter watches her, she knows,
but she refuses to know
how here he is still High King
since she suspects it is because he is looking
down on her.
With high heels, she meets
his eyes and wonders
if maybe she is wrong.
She will not return to
the games of childhood,
since it is only the games of adults
(careful frauds though they be)
which garner even a tiny bit of the respect she once enjoyed,
and childhood games leave
the worst skinned knees
on women who attempt to play them.
Or men, or sisters,
who get on trains to find those games.
When for the first time since forever
no one knows she is a queen
Susan finds herself tired of womanhood
and knows she is finally free to fade, if so she wishes.
In her stores of girlish hoarding
lie a horn and dusty crown;
no one needs them shined and ready.
So I do not blame Susan,
who never wished to fall so hard from wardrobe door
to dull wooden floor
and then drew lines up backs of thighs
to dance with boys throughout the nights
who never would grasp hilt of sword
or wonder if there was anything more
to the dark-haired beauty clasped in their arms,
who would long in those moments to be just a girl
never queen in a world
she can never forget
or quite regain yet.