“Redacted” 2nd Place Winner

Body Count

by Hero Jason Uchebenu
hand on purple background

Editor’s Note

“Body Count” accomplishes two things at once: it navigates the fear of being outed while also attempting to account for the deaths of LGBTQ people in Nigeria, who face severe state-sponsored and societal persecution. The narrator’s tone is both cognizant and defiantly blunt about violence as a means of erasure: “as if a blade trips, & suddenly / there’s a throat in the way.”

in the beginning, there were numbers.
a mouthful of them invented to make murder 
sound too much like arithmetic: 
one body, plus one scream, times 2,000. 
count. 2,000 seconds from now, 
the sky will fall a little lower. 
you won’t feel it, but that’s the 
whole point. every second is leash
to hold. pull long enough, & something 
gives—a brick, a breath, a body. 
2,000 meters away, abuja area mama 
is murdered. her jaw clenched shut
like she bit through 2,000 spoons, 
because the knife was busy elsewhere 
in her body. at the crime scene, a man
says she saw it coming. says war begins 
at 2,000 miles before the first shot is fired.
says a number first fits into a mouth, 
long before it fits into a headline: 

news flash—popular nigerian trans woman
found dead along abuja highway. tragic incident. 

say mister, then say ma’am. 
say incident as if violence is a thing 
that stumbles into itself. 
as if a blade trips, & suddenly 
there’s a throat in the way. 
you count 2,000 ways to burn 
& not one of them requires fire. 
i count 2,000 kilometers spreading too wide 
for justice. 2,000 steps taken
from the scene to the morgue.
2,000 failures stacked 
into something that moves—or will 
no longer move. 
i have seen a man’s face break 
when he steps over a body
that looks like his but isn’t. 
i have grazed concrete that bore
the outline of a scream, the contour of a jaw 
that resisted. what have we made 
of this world? you count numbers, 
i count cities by how fast they eat 
their dead. 
somewhere, someone prays for morning 
& gets only more night. 
safety is a watered dialogue 
budding in the mouths of norm-borns.
the rest of us lock our doors & pray our pronouns 
don’t leak into the night.
at 2,000 feet above sea level, the air thins, 
but not my memory. 
2,000 lights have gone out & each one, 
a little apocalypse. 
i will count. i will count 2,000 times 
if that’s what it takes. 
if that’s what it takes 
for one of them
to finally count 
back.
count. 
Hilary Ikechukwu Emerole.

count.
Hamza Idris-Tofawa. 

count.
Umar Yusuf-Dungurawa.

count.

Hero Jason Uchebenu

“Redacted” 2nd Place Winner
Hero Jason Uchebenu is a writer of Ukwuani descent, a small ethnic group in southern Nigeria. His writing seeks to make sense of the human experience and everyday life, infusing storytelling with poetry and, occasionally, humor. Hero’s works have appeared or are forthcoming in PencilMarks and Scribbles, Brittle Paper, Fiery Scribe Review, Frontier Poetry, and elsewhere. Bald at just twenty-six, nothing surprises him anymore. Connect with him at herojason1999@gmail.com or follow him on X @herojayseen.

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