When I lost my travel book centuries ago
burned the ancient forest where
you were my favorite tree
You are the reality I cannot close in on
what flew through my hair that I
mistook for permanency
|
Wednesday, 16 September 2015
A misunderstanding
Tomorrow is Crying for You (Pt. 5)
I
woke still tucked between the sweaters, and still, to my disappointment, very
tiny. A quick check confirmed the
presence of fairy wings. I risked a
small peek outside of the drawer, but nothing in the room had changed. The lamp glowed softly, the faded
flower-printed covers of the double bed remained untouched.
As
I emerged from the drawer I realized I had no idea how long I’d slept. The endless twilight had not given way to
dawn—it never did. That hadn’t seemed to
matter the other times I’d visited, but now it left me cold. I wanted to know how long I’d been in this
room—or at least to believe that the clock was ticking down on this fairy
fantasy, and that soon I would wake up somewhere else.
Try
as I might, though, I could find no clock.
In low spirits I left the room, the quiet now beginning to stifle
me. Yet it seemed unwise to make my own
noise, so I flew in almost total silence back to the restaurant, hoping to discover
Marietta this time.
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
Diary entry, March 2014
But I can’t. I can’t because I'm afraid. The stories come to me in dreams and
haunt me. They refuse translation. I am afraid.
I don’t want anyone to know me. I
don’t want anyone to know anything. I
don’t want to know myself.
Saint Margaret
Monday, 14 September 2015
Haunted
"If you could never go back to your world, what would you miss most?"
Josie thought of Jack and her mother; of her aunt; of how it felt to stand barefoot on the cool driveway pavement early on a summer morning. "Pumpkin bread," she answered.
"Pumpkin bread," the King repeated. "What is pumpkin bread?"
"Something worth missing."
The King wondered why Josie's smile seemed so sad. But this time he did not ask.
Tomorrow is Crying for You (Pt. 4)
Still,
my woolly thoughts seemed to be leading me somewhere, so I pushed out of my
mind the math exams I’d missed, the classrooms I couldn’t find. I didn’t want to think about the times I woke
up in a library, with only a few days left to write a year-end term paper I
hadn’t even started. I never knew how
these crises turned out, because suddenly they would be over, and I would be
here, on my way to the restaurant to visit Marietta. She never asked where I’d been. She was my friend.
Finally
the hallway widened into a large, silent atrium, with massive stairs leading to
the second floor. I buzzed up the
staircase, following its curvature instead of simply flying straight up. In the much smaller hallway off to the right
some instinct, or past experience, brought me to a small bedroom, gently lit by
a reading lamp. I didn’t know whose it
was or why no one slept there tonight, but I did know I would be safe here—at
least for a little while.
| Photo by C. Hornby |
The
bed, however, was not an option. I
fluttered over to the tall chest of drawers.
Each drawer had been left open, just the tiniest bit: I settled for the middle drawer, the one with
the thick woolly winter sweaters. When I
was big I’d hated wool and its scratchy, suffocating warmth, but now I curled
myself into a tight ball between a snowflake-patterned jumper and a purple
cabled cardigan and let out a little sigh.
Tomorrow, perhaps, I would be big again.
Tomorrow I might remember why I kept forgetting.
Sunday, 13 September 2015
The Coming Fall
I do not know the
riddle, I insist
perhaps this is a
trick
there is no riddle
Is this what you
must believe, the
dragon returns
I never told you so
the riddle has been
scratching at you for years now
no wonder you are
tired
I am not well, I
repeat
I want none of your
riddles
I only want peace
There is the
problem, my child
there will be no
peace until
you speak the words
you knew this long
ago
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)