Remember how the flowers looked when you were young
I raised my delicate chin and glanced my virgin eyes to the night
sky. A wrought chasm; vast ocean, model of treasures, perpetual
beauty. Never still, never moving. Never black, never white. The air
tasted so thin and so brittle. I took a deep breath and was
transported far away, to some place where the air is warm all the
time and the stress and malevolence of the world doesn't seem to
apply to those playing their small part in a small scene. The warm
night air reminded me of days past.
The aches of the universe seem less impertinent to the young, I
romanticise that when I think of the past, all I can do is think
about how happy I was. Cool, blush breezes coming in from the sea and
our pale bodies sitting on a dark volcanic beach. Beautiful.
Every crack in the pavement reminded me of the slow decay of time.
A car sprints by,
I have always been here, stuck in limbo. Dancing as I do, around
and around the centre point of monotony, the tails of my dress
branching out in every direction, looking for signs of life to come
and dance with me but there is no one here to dance. The world has
stopped moving and soon the music will cease to play and when all the
world has stopped and there is no longer any music to hear, then I
shall be dumb. As two of my senses leave me then I do expect that the
world shall soon turn dark too, perhaps taste shall become bland as I
revert to a singularity, unaware of my own existence, imitating the
world around me. I wonder if everywhere is just as devoid of
humanity. Does the whole world forget how to dance? Perhaps they
never heard the music.
Staring at the ground and following my feet, I found that I had
arrived at my home. Unmistakably identical to the rest of the row
that litters the side of the pavement, I wondered if it was possible
for flowers to bloom in these conditions. If they did, I wondered if
all of those flowers would look the same. One long row of sickly,
yellow, drooping daffodils. I unlocked the door and surveyed the
narrow hallway for signs of life.
"That you Lizzie?" Called a familiar voice from down the
hall.
I marched down the hallway and found my father sitting in his
habitual chair. The middle-aged man looked delighted to see me. His
bright brown eyes glistened and a smile grew from what could have
only been a forlorn face only a few second earlier. A stained, grey
vest drooped across his weak stem, mimicking the pallet of the colour
in his face and his sullen cheeks did well to maintain the illusion
of peace that he was fighting to maintain. He sat, arched in his high
backed, brazenly-dull red chair, looking completely in keeping with
the mood of the room and the aroma perpetuating the room was as the
earth that feeds it was dying.
"Hey Dad."
As sombre a reply as I tried to give I couldn't help but
entertain his enthusiasm and my response sounded warm. I hate the way
he sits in a chair that faces the opening of the living room, away
from the sun. It is a pre-emptive cry for attention. It forces
anybody who enters to interact with the man and the man always sits
in that chair. I pity the man and his lack life-spark, leading him to
desperation, it seeps from his every pour. Middle age and in the
winter of his life, not through illness but through defeat. I want to
pick him up and shake him until the colour returns to his face and
the will back to his limbs, scream his name at him until he remembers
it. I feel like he is looking for someone to save him and I would if
that person was me but it isn't.
"How was the library sweetheart?" He asks, pushing a
wavy golden-grey brown lock away from his eyes.
"Oh, you know. It's the library."
I glance up to meet his unwavering gaze and fragile ego at the
same time before moving on through the living room, stepping over
dead clothes and buried litter to reach the kitchen,
"Or at least I shouldn't lose any sleep over the rapturous,
intermittent solace I afforded myself. Is Gael in? I have missed
him."
Though I couldn't see him, I could tell the man's heart sunk a
little at the prospect of losing the company of his 'little girl', or
perhaps that it was that I chose to respond in such a callous and
unfiltered manner and no man likes to be shown by a woman that his
senses are inferior to his, let alone that of a man twenty two years
his junior.
He answers, "Yeah-Sweetheart, he is up in his room..."
I scold myself that I could act so brazen to a man who is not
currently of this earth. An apathetic and sullen middle-aged man, his
heart swells, it is open but nothing dares come near. I convince
myself that I am a wicked and vile woman for having so little thought
for one who has spent so much of his time and wasted youth assuring
my safety and relative happiness; a man who, in all likelihood, is in
his current state because of the darkness that he shielded me from
just so that I may have stayed in the light. These days I make my own
light though, should I extinguish my own fire just to set his ablaze
again? Then perhaps he could do the same for me. We can perpetually
reignite each other's souls until one of us dies and leaves the other
in darkness. I think this a poor agenda but decide to engage him none
the less.
"How is the job hunt going?" I ask, stepping into the
room, now clutching a crusty piece of bread.
My father now looks a little taken back by the directness of the
question and raises his eyebrows as if being shown a gun, he slowly
nods his head, as if only half comprehending the question, "Oh
you know how it is Lizzy, a lot people applying to accountancy jobs
at the moment. Plus, with the GBH charge, it makes it a little
difficult to get an 'in' anywhere you know... but something will come
up, real soon, I promise." Dad speaks with the quivering voice
of a wounded deer being shown the mantle it is going to spend the
rest of its existence on, I can almost see death in his eyes and I
can hear his voice shake when he speaks.
"It's ok Dad," I can almost hear a quiver in my voice as
well, "You will come through this, I know, you have always been
there for me, I couldn't ask for a better father."
Finding a morsel of confidence in himself, he thanks his daughter
and smiles at the words, so carefully glittered upon him. "All I
need is that bitch-ex wife of mine to give me back my son and I will
alright!" He exclaims with the veracity that thinking about his
emasculated position in his family bestows on him.
So painfully transparent. My heart anchors further into the dirt
to see him so base. So angry. I suspect that he has been drinking but
I don't make an accusation. I can't bare the argument. I can't bare
the discussion as to why when he has his son but two days of the
week, he would let that time spent unceremonious. Gael spends much of
his time in his room. Father spends most of his time in his chair.
All the while the air gets thinner. A shrivelling sound of silence
falls over the room and it seems to get darker. I can hear the clock
and it ticks a slow, concise, ravenous tick followed by a contrived,
villainous tock, feeding on the elaboration of the monotony of time
with the contempt that only one that counts every second could.
I meander upstairs, minding every step as a stepping stone between
me and the colours that I have not seen in an age that is too long
for my sight. The narrow stairwell is cavernous, seems to grow in
stature. My steps seem to disturb agitated frogs that snap at my
heels. The top of the stairs is a bog overgrown; laying a brazen
testament to a battle that took place some time ago. A battle fought
with malice and forked shaped tongues as swords and loneliness for
armour. The shields to each soldier's personal battle lay shut in
front of me. In the case of my father's, it lay bolted but all had
the markings of each of their own personal battles. Dents that lay as
constant reminders of times when the swords physically manifested
themselves into objects capable of scarring more than just our
memories.
Not Gael's door though. Gael's door remained wound-less.
I push open the wooden white flag that separates war from peace
and walk across the threshold into a small hovel with glistening red,
striped, crystal-ruby red on waxing-cherry crimson wall paper with a
bright white and immaculately patterned designed sky above head. The
crushing reality of the house and its memories are forgotten. A
quaint wardrobe, the sides smoothed so that the most delicate of
feathers would nest and feel in their hearts that they were at home.
I take care to take in the touch of the soft, plush, grass-like
feeling that overwhelms my feet as I enter, I have walked through
lush greens in summer that have not felt half as comforting as the
ground does feel in that room. The book shelf sits a picture of a
thousand colours, ranging from Wells to Orwell, smiling across the
room to what was a very small boy, sitting, engulfed, drowning in a
light blue bed duvet. The boy sits happily observing one of the
missing teeth of his smiling friend, transported far away.
I smile to behold him. His scrawny frame cuddled by a T-shirt
befitting a boy twice his size, his bony elbows rest on his knees as
his knees are bent towards his chest. His little bony cheeks seems to
glow of wisdom beyond that of the years of an eleven year old boy and
the deep ridges that encompass his eyes are caves of awe that
perceive the world in a curious tone, the way an eager minded young
boy should.
"Hey trouble." I speak softly and try to hide all of the
joy that I feel upon seeing this small treasure and if I give it all
to him now, then I shall have nothing more to give him later. Gael
puts his book down immediately; his eyes bounce to mine and his teeth
shine enthusiastically.
"Lizz-ee! I have been waiting for you, you said you wouldn't
be so late today!" The child tries to scorn me but is incapable
holding irksome thoughts.
So, I act wounded, as not to do his feelings disregard. "Oh,
forgive me!" and I throw myself across his bed, "Please
forgive me sire, the road was long and the journey was arduous."
Gael smiles a smile so bright that Icarus would have flown once
more just to get a closer look and have his heart warmed. I remember
what it feels like to be alive. Our jovial introductions continued
for some time and I bestow upon him many cuddles and many kisses to
which he pretends to detest. He jumps over my back and I wrestle him
off. I never felt so happy as when I am playing with Gael. At length,
Gael stands up and makes his way across his room and pulls out an
envelope from a draw containing many secret things that a boy of
eleven would treasure. He tries to hide his smile but it is clear to
me that he extremely pleased with himself, whatever it is he has put
inside the envelope, it is clear it is of great importance to him and
he would like it to be of great importance to me too.
"I got this for you!" He pushes the envelope into my
hand and stumbles back in an action that looks as much running away
as anything.
"What is it?" I ask after him. Gael was fond giving me
things, pictures that he has drawn and his writing, amongst other
things.
"Open it!" Everything Gael said was said with such
excitement. His life pulsated with playful delights, it was all game
to him. He couldn't wait to begin having fun when he came into
contact with someone he liked. So quiet for a boy his age and so
uninterested in society, but he made his own society and filled it
with love. Those who he did enjoy the company of, he would hold onto
so tightly that they would turn to diamond and feel their time all
the more valuably spent as a result.
I open the plain, unmarked envelope and find enclosed in it two
tickets to the circus. Though, I was underwhelmed by the idea of
attending such an event, the way the boy was looking up at me as I
sat on his bed, his wide eyes full to the brim of hope, I knew that
it would take just the slightest prick to burst his joy filled
bubble. So, without the slightest hint of disappointment or
hesitation, I gasped and opened my mouth, meeting his gaze with the
same enthusiasm that he was showing me.
"Oh, my Gael, this is wonderful! How did you get these? I
hope you didn't spend all your money on them, I would feel ever so
guilty. But I love it, I can't wait. You are the most wonderful
brother any girl could ask for! You do know how to look after me. One
week from now? Won't this be wonderful" The number of
superlatives that I did unleash on the poor boy knew no bounds and
Gael blushed, unable to contain the sense of pride and adulation that
he had brought upon himself and I.
"I just got them!" He blurted out.
"Well I can't wait to go, you cheeky little money," and
I smiled at him, then we hugged a long embrace, I thought of the
weight of life and responsibilities to other human beings within
society.
The obligations of human interaction. An
utterly unprofitable acquisition, when looked at from any direction.
Yet, all encompassing, the centre of what it is to be human. Tearing
as apart from the outside in, questioning what is right and what is
wrong and what is even real. What it is to be alive is a surreal
course of interactions, knocking us from one path to another, until
we are quite sure we are lost, but if the smiling faces that are on
that path look familiar and fill us with joy, then we are truly never
lost. Nothing is ever really forgotten. It lives on, inside of us,
forever. What has happened is just as relevant now as it was when it
happened. In this throwaway society, we treat the people around us
and our acquaintances as trowels. The trowel digs a hole in the earth
to which we hope that flowers will grow. An impersonal tool. Treat
the tools to which you hope to dig your flowers with well. I shall be
the eternal gardener and plant flowers forever.
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