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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1620142-The-Long-Way-Home
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by Lenore Author IconMail Icon
Rated: E · Short Story · Writing · #1620142
Trying to piece back together the scattered pieces, but feeling lost...
  Tired as I was from the drive, I couldn’t relax in that tiny motel room. I tried to blame it on the lumpy avocado bed or the lingering scent of stale cigarettes, but I knew that wasn’t what was keeping me awake. Thoughts were competing inside my mind, nipping for attention, begging to be given validation. I had no idea where I was going. No destination marked on the map. Just a room, bouncing hollowness back at me.

  I tried lying back in the bed and counting the plaster tiles, and then slowly, I moved on to the yellow-grey water stains, trying to discern a pattern in the seeming randomness. There had to be some sense in the world. Why couldn’t I find it in the ceiling’s imperfections?

  Back home I knew I was loved, but I also knew I couldn’t stay in that town any longer.  Not after what happened. I couldn’t stand the sight of another cobbled drive or another picketed fence. I couldn’t bare another plastic smile or whisper behind my back. I didn’t want one more frozen casserole. And I didn’t need one more glance full of false concern.

  I thought if I could just get away- maybe it will be alright; maybe something in the world would make sense again. If only one little thing in the world would make sense, maybe I could move on…But nothing is ever easy, so I chose the easiest, hard path: the one labeled “goodbye”.

  As I packed my bags I was almost giddy at the thought of escape. My heart pounded in my ears, covering the little lies I told to smooth my way:

“…No, I’ll be fine or I just need a fresh start…”, “Yes, I have a plan, it’s all here- somewhere…”

  Like a mantra, I repeated those lines over and over trying to make them true. I told them to anybody who cared enough to ask a direct question, but mostly I repeated them to myself. By the time my bags were packed, I believed them.

  The day I drove away, I felt like there was a reason to hope; the sky was crystalline and road out of town was newly paved. I wanted to get as far away as possible. I drove as far as that first day would take me, and until the next day caught up. I drove until I could barely think enough to drive, and finally I pulled my little red truck over in some little town with a name not worth mentioning.

  And it's here I find myself, counting tiles, trying to avoid the thoughts breaking my sense of peace. The absolute certainty that this is the direction I should be headed is missing. I can’t say if it is right, wrong, or somewhere in-between. I only know I once had a place that felt like home, and I don’t know which direction will lead me back.
© Copyright 2009 Lenore (isis_lenore at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1620142-The-Long-Way-Home