Sunday, 27 November 2011

Träumer



I’ve started to hate dreaming.

I dream about dark rooms and cages made of rose vines. Where the air feels like syrup as I breathe and leaves the taste of poison on my tongue, heavy and bitter and dark. Where the tips of thorns graze my skin; feather-light but still enough to draw beads of blood. I am made of glass in those dreams. I am pulled in a dozen different directions. I am lost. I am broken. I am drowning in the dark and the scent of caramel and sweet, suffocating smoke.

I dream about bright lights and castles made of crystal. Where I am falling from impossibly high towers and balconies. Where there are courtiers and jesters and all manner of delightful monsters and I am not sure if I am one of them or something else entirely. I am trapped in mirrors in those dreams. I am forced to run just to stand still. I am confused. I am falling. I am losing myself in dances and impossible colours and beautiful, terrifying eyes.

I dream about glass walls and empty corridors. Where there are clocks surrounding me and time is moving too fast and too slowly all at once. Where I am chased by indistinct shapes with jewels for eyes and teeth and I have nowhere to run to. I am falling apart into pieces of clockwork and porcelain in those dreams. I am terrified. I am dying. I am feeling my legs start to fail me and forgetting how to breathe and I am unable to stop even for a moment.

So instead I lie awake and restless and too aware of the sound of my own breathing and the rise and fall of my chest. And then I am in a darkened room with a cage of rose vines, and I realise that it has started all over again.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Sugar and String


It started with a sugar mouse. Nothing complicated. Just a sugar mouse in a little brown paper bag and endless amusement that you could actually make something like that out of sugar and a piece of string.


After she finished it, she tied the piece of string around her pinkie finger and wore it for the rest of the day, just because.

From then on, she’d buy herself a sugar mouse every week. It wasn’t something she could explain, but it was important somehow. Something simple she could rely on. There would always be a sugar mouse on a Friday afternoon, no matter what else might happen.

If something good happened, it was a celebration. If something bad happened, it was something to remind her that there would always be good things left for her, even if it was as simple as some sugar and a piece of string.

“Sometimes it’s the little things that get you,” her father had said once. Looking at her weekly sugar mouse in its paper bag made her believe that. Even if it was simple, it was something. It was important.

The shopkeeper always made sure to keep one aside for her if it looked like they might run out. He always made sure it was a different colour every week, and she was always grateful for that, even though they both knew that she liked the white ones best.

“It’s not as though they taste any different,” she’d say. “But the white ones are best, I think. Sugar’s meant to be that colour.”

The shop closed the day before her eighteenth birthday.

The last day was a Thursday, so she had to get her last sugar mouse a day early. It was an unsettling break in her simple routine, but it seemed fitting somehow. The shopkeeper didn’t seem surprised. He simply slid a sugar mouse into a paper bag and twisted it closed like he always did.

“I saved a white one for you; I know how much you like them.” She managed to smile for him.

“I suppose I’ll have to find something else to be my reminder of all the good things. I’ve been relying on my sugar mice all this time; it’ll be hard to find something to match that.”

“Maybe you should try making them yourself,” the shopkeeper said.

She took her sugar mouse out of its bag and looked at it for a moment.

“Do you think I could?”

“I think you could do anything you set your mind to, and I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone else who’s given sugar mice twelve years of attention.”

She left the shop with her white sugar mouse, and a bag containing a recipe and some moulding tins.

After she finished the mouse, she tied the string around her pinkie finger, and wore it for the rest of the day. Just because.

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Pierrot


“You should smile.”

Whenever she was feeling sad or lonely, somehow, there he’d be, and that’s what he would say to her. And it always worked, even if it was only a little twitch at the corner of her mouth at the familiarity of the words. But that was enough; it was still a smile to him.

“That’s better,” he’d say. “Now, see if you can do it like this!” And he’d stretch his mouth into a grin so wide that she was sure it must hurt his face, using his fingers to push it out as far as it would go, until she could do nothing but dissolve into giggles at the sheer ridiculousness of it.

He said he liked it best when she laughed like that.


~*~

The day he learned to juggle, he rushed to show her. When she laughed and applauded him, his grin stretched ever wider.

“Now I have something else to make you smile,” he said, and she couldn’t help but match his grin as he tossed the three juggling balls even higher in the air.

~*~

“What happened?” She blinked back her tears and shook her head.

“It’s nothing.”

“It’s not nothing.” He tilted her face up and looked her in the eye. “You aren’t smiling anymore.”

“What difference does that make?” she asked. His expression seemed determined and she didn’t understand the way he was staring at her, the other layer to his gaze.

“Because as long as you can smile, I know that you’re alright. Now come here, I’ve got a new trick to show you.”

And she let him take her hand and pull her to her feet and lead her away from that place. When she asked him again why her smile mattered so much, he told her that her smile was a beautiful thing, and that beautiful things shouldn’t be hidden away. She told him that it wasn’t nice to lie, even to make a friend feel better, and he smiled and told her that he had never lied to her.

At those words, she started to cry again.
~*~

He taught her how to walk a tightrope in his back garden, holding her arms out at right angles as she wobbled along between the two small poles.

“I don’t understand how you manage this,” she’d laughed as he stopped her from falling yet again.

“It keeps you smiling, doesn’t it?” he said simply. He walked along it after she finally gave up, and she was sure that he fell off on purpose, but she would have laughed either way.


“But you shouldn’t hurt yourself just to make me happy you know. Wouldn’t that make me the worst kind of friend?”

He only laughed as he dusted himself off, and she wondered, if he could laugh at his own hurt like that, how could she know if his smile was genuine?

~*~


“Why didn’t you say anything?” He didn’t meet her eyes until she made him, her fingers pulling at his face until he finally met her gaze. He was still trying to smile, but when he saw that there were tears in her eyes again, it slipped away.

“It didn’t matter, as long as you were happy.” She shook her head angrily and tightened her grip around his wrist with its myriad scars and marks.

“How could I be happy about something like this? Why should I have been happy when you were hurting so much?”

“Making you happy made it easier. Seeing your smile made it better.” She stared at him, speechless, before pulling him to her, her cheek against his hair.

“Don’t pretend anymore,” she told him. “From now on, if you’re sad, then cry. If you’re hurt, be in pain. Share it with me. I’ll cry for you if I have to.” She forced a small smile onto her face. “And then, when you smile, I can really believe it.”

She stood up and brushed his hair away from his face and smiled for him one more time.

"No more Pierrot, okay?" He caught and held her hand against his face for a moment, and his smile returned.

“Okay.”

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Keep It For Me



The first time he saw her, she was sitting on a dead tree that was half submerged in the lake.

“I think it’s sad, don’t you?” she had asked. “When I saw it sitting alone out here, I thought I should sit with it. Nothing should just be forgotten.”

He said nothing. She just shook her head and turned her gaze back out across the water. He watched the ripples spreading outwards from where her feet touched the surface.

He heard his heart beat.
~*~

The second time he saw her, she was swinging her legs on top of an old stone wall and she gave him a photograph she’d taken of a bicycle.

“I found it by the roadside. I think whoever owned it must have loved that bicycle, don’t you?” He said nothing. He handed the picture back to her.

She took it and looked at him with sad eyes that he didn’t really understand.

“I hope they loved it. I think it’s sad to be thrown away without at least being loved first.”

He watched as she tucked the photograph into her pocket and then walked away from him along the top of the stone wall.

He felt himself take a breath.
~*~

The third time he saw her, she was standing in the darkness and staring at the sky.

“I used to be so scared of the dark. It felt like being alone, being small and alone with no one standing beside you.”

He said nothing. She closed her eyes and spread her arms.

“I don’t think I’m so afraid of being alone anymore. I think if you’re alone for long enough, you get used to it. You learn to stand beside yourself.”

He thought he heard her start to cry.

“I just hope I don’t end up alone like that tree in the lake. I hope no one throws me away like the bicycle.”

He watched her run away into the darkness until his eyes strained with trying to see her.

He felt himself start to move.
~*~

The fourth time he saw her, she was sitting on a rock with a paper aeroplane in her hands.

“I thought that maybe I could write my feelings down and let them go, and maybe that would make things easier. But they won’t go in the right direction. They just end up crumpled on the ground.”

He said nothing. He took the aeroplane from her and smoothed it out so that he could read what was written on it. Then he folded it up and put it in his pocket and watched her smile.

“I’m glad that they reached someone. I’m glad that someone will look after them for a little while.”

He watched as she stood up and turned to go.

He felt himself grab her hand.