She stood there hours after everyone else was
gone. She'd lost all perception of time, as she simply stood over
his... She saw it but still couldn't say it, not out loud, not even
to herself, she just couldn't. Maybe she was scared that saying it
would make her realize this wasn't just a horrible dream. Scared
that admitting it would solidify her own pre-existing fear of one day
joining him wherever it is he was now gone. Scared of being reminded
there were things outside her control, things she could not change or
fix no matter how much she learned about them; no matter how smart
she was or hard she tried.
Honestly she never even expected it to affect
her so much. Although he'd been a big part of her childhood, she
hadn't actually seen him or spoken to him in years. As ashamed as
she was to admit it, she'd come to slowly forget about him; until
that distraught phone call from her brother one week ago. She could
tell he'd been crying despite his desperate attempt at trying to
cover up the tears in his voice. She hated it when he cried; she
genuinely wished she could bring him back to life to stop her little
brother's tears. Maybe if she stood here long enough he would jump
out from where he lay and scream "surprise!" or "boo!" or "it
was just a prank!" but of course he wouldn't. For the simple
reason that it wasn't a prank and she knew it. Still she stood
there, until her legs started to hurt, till her shoulders felt heavy
and her head weighted too much for her neck to hold up. She closed
her eyes and took a deep breath as if making up for the ones he
couldn't take anymore. She stared right at the tombstone that bore
his name and forced the words "you're dead" out of her lips.
She felt the full weight of those words as she took a moment to let
them sink deep within her heart. She let out a heavy sigh before
turning and walking away.
She sat on the terrace of a coffee shop
enjoying a cup of tea, while trying to rationalize her feelings. It
was the only way she knew how to deal with them. She'd been sitting
there for a while now, questioning herself and trying to come up with
reasonable answers as to why she felt the way she did, when an
interaction on the sidewalk caught her attention. A little girl,
maybe 6, complained about her untied shoelaces; her grand-father
picked her up and sat her on the trunk of their car. He then
patiently went through the steps to teach her how to tie her laces on
her own. The scene made her feel nostalgic for her own childhood; for
every morning when her parents were either sleeping or arguing, but
he'd be there, he'd teach her how to tie her shoelaces before
holding her hand to the car and driving her to school. Every.
Morning. Despite the sadness the memory filled her with an odd sense
of happiness. "You have a lovely child" she called out to the old
man on the sidewalk from her table. The man turned around and smiled
at her "thank you. " He said, then turning to address the child
"What do we say to the nice lady Molly?" and the child replied
shyly "thank you..." she smiled at the family as they got in the
car and the old man politely nodded at her "have a nice day!"
"You too" she muttered much too silently for him to have heard.
Not that he seemed to care, he was already driving away.
She walked in to her
apartment to James fretting around in the kitchen, she didn't even
question it anymore and just let out an exasperated sigh. He
immediately left the kitchen to join her in the living room where she
was already taking her coat off. "Where were you? I called like a
billion times and you wouldn't answer your phone!" he exclaimed
taking her coat. "Yes well. There is a reason for that." She said
nonchalantly. "Yes I know you hate phone calls. But I texted you
like a bajillion times and you didn't reply, so like a normal human
being I got worried..." she cut him off "I highly doubt you sent
me a 'bajillion' texts; as you can see I'm fine. You can go
home." There was a moment of silence as his amber eyes peered into
her dark brown ones, trying to decipher what she was feeling. His
stare made her a little uncomfortable so she turned away and headed
towards the kitchen. "You seem upset." He said simply and she
replied just as simply "that's because I came home to a picked
lock and a creep running around my kitchen." He chuckled but didn't
say anything else, he just stood there for a while looking at her.
"Your landlord told me about your loss...he was worried...said you
were...moodier... than usual." He said hesitantly. She put her
glass of water down swallowing her aspirin, then walked back towards
James throwing her hands in the air and said "well as you can see
I'm not quite dying of chagrin yet so you can go ahead and tell him
that I'm perfectly fine!" she hated that look in his eyes. He
looked at her like she was a wounded puppy and she hated it.
"Alright." He said getting his coat, he then paused and added "I
don't know how important this person was to you...but I just wanted
to say I'm really sorry for your loss." She shrugged and tried to
seem unaffected "it's not like there was anything you could've
done" but the second the words came out she knew she'd failed.
It's not like there was anything he could've done. It's not
like there was anything she could've done and her helplessness
angered her to no end. She was so preoccupied with her thoughts that
she was surprised to find herself in James' arms; his hand resting
at the top of her head, his arm wrapped around her. "What are you
doing?" she asked perplexed by this unrequited show of affection.
"Well...I'm hugging you. That's a thing normal people do when
the people they care about are sad. It's supposed to make you feel
better." He explained as if she was completely alien to the concept
of hugs. "It's not working, and I don't understand what makes
you think I'm sad." She said attempting to persuade herself as
much as James. "Give it sometime. It's okay" he murmured,
slowly rocking her side to side "you're okay." A few moments
passed in silence and she muttered a "thank you" which made him
laugh out loud. She broke the contact off "what's so funny?"
she asked unsure of what it was he found so amusing. He smiled and
said "nothing really. I'm sorry I shouldn't have laughed! It's
just that I never expected to be thanked by you ever and it caught me
off guard." She didn't say anything and simply turned and walked
away from him. He felt a pang of empathic sadness and let out a
silent sigh. "If you need anything just...let me know okay?" he
asked slightly concerned, she waved her hand at him dismissively from
behind the couch where she'd thrown herself. "Oh and one last
thing" he called out as he was leaving and she groaned "anybody
ever tell you, you talk too much?" "I left you some chocolate
cake in the fridge" he said simply "goodnight" and she heard
the door close and his footsteps down the hallway as he left. She
just laid there staring at the ceiling with tears in her eyes and
what looked like a small smile.
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