Tallies on the wall. Doors that rearrange, In strange, entropic ways. That dissemble and confuse To keep two locked in the halls; The lights flicker, periodically- They spot shadows on their peripheral- Likewise in intervals. They seem to speak, But only mockingly. They did not choose this fate; The house chose them. Some must be condemned- Like Minos and the Minotaur- For a terrible hunger to abate. Another tally in the frame. They’ve been this way earlier, Though their recollection’s getting murkier, While hands reach from plaster, Reaching to claim. They must learn to love the maze The freedom in being confined; At least their goal is defined- After all, once you enter, you may never leave, And are doomed to tread the lengthways.
Outside cars pass and children play pretend By a for sale home overgrown, Inconspicuous, yet locally it is well-known: You never get too close To the house that never ends.