Khayelihle Benghu
The Order I Carried Out
I. The Order I Carried Out
They said it was necessary
that word polished like a badge.
I held it in my mouth
until it tasted like iron.
There was a moment
small as a match head
where I could have said no.
But the room was full of ranks,
and my spine learned obedience
before my tongue learned truth.
Even now, I remember
how precise my hands were,
how calm the air became afterward
as if violence, done correctly,
deserves quiet.
They thanked me.
That is the part
that keeps me awake
not the act,
but the applause.
II. Inventory of What Remains
No blood on my hands
that would be simpler.
Instead, I carry fragments
a voice I ignored,
a truth I bent,
a silence I fed.
Tell me
which part condemns me most?
The world moves on easily.
It forgets with discipline.
But I have become
an archive of small betrayals,
catalogued in bone and breath.
Sometimes I try to forgive myself
practice the words
like a foreign language.
They don’t stay.
Because somewhere inside,
a version of me still stands,
watching
and refuses to look away
III. In the Presence of Uniforms
They wore certainty
like a second skin.
Every command
arrived already justified,
every action
pre-approved by power.
You learn quickly
how doubt becomes dangerous
how questions
sound like disloyalty.
So I swallowed mine.
It tasted like metal,
like something forged
and forced into shape.
Even now,
when no one is watching,
I feel the ghost of that discipline
a voice that says,
obey first,
understand later.
I am still unlearning
the order of things
Khayelihle Benghu is an emerging writer based in Johannesburg, South Africa.