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This girl fears the girl of his memories. Can he convince her that she is now the one? |
about 1700 words Girl Fears Ghost Girl by James Foley Night on the beach. Awakening suddenly, David felt Jamieâs dark hair tickling his cheek. He stirred on the towel. âHow long was I asleep?â âOnly for a few minutes,â Jamie said. âYou must be beat.â Easy night: peaceâthe sky clear above a sea dark as itself. And the eastern stars were ushering up the aging half-moon, still clinging to the oceanâs edge: this old ocean that could take one across the world, maybe with this girl Jamie, as once heâd wanted to go with another sweetheart: Dazzling Cynthia, once his living wifeâJamieâs wild friend. âJerryâs up at La Cantina,â Jamie said now. âI think heâs giving us some privacy. David, I want to go up to the beach house and bury something there where you and Cynthia lived. Itâs a present she gave me. I can never wear them again.â âYouâre going to come back, Jamie?â âYes, for a little while.â âSwear youâll come back.â âIâll be back. Go back to sleep, David.â Right. But as soon as he did, she came backâthe ghost girl, maintaining the old obsession in the void of its fulfillment: his olden-days golden-haired wife, wriggling her toes in the sand, just as she used to. âRight in front of the beach house,â she said. âThatâs sweet, David. I love it when you come hereâeven if itâs without me. What about the farm, baby? Will you ever go back thereânow that I never will?â âWeâll talk about itâat dinner.â âDavid, you know Iâm dead.â âNo, I donât know that.â âYeah, Iâm dead all right. And youâre with Jamie now. I saw you together. I waited till she left.â âHow can you see, if youâre dead?â âThe dead see better, David. They see it all. And they weepâbecause they didnât see it before.â # The moon seemed brighter now, but still low above the breakers that crashed and frothed, moon-brightened beneath it. But was this only a moon of dreamsâmimicking the moon above his closed eyes? âSweetheart,â he said, âthis canât be dreaming. Dreamers donât know theyâre dreaming.â âI think sometimes they do,â Cynthia said: âIn between dreaming and day-dreaming. Youâre dreaming in the moonlight now, David.â But somehowâin this dream or out of itâshe was embracing him tightly, hard. âNo. No, Cynthia. This is no dream.â âItâs our last dream, David: to hold each other one last timeâto kiss once more.â âIf youâre dead, how can you kiss so hard?â âYouâre imagining me, David. Your lips that are pressing so hard against mine: you, my earth lover. And me, your old wild girl: itâs all just imagination. Itâs not me youâre feeling. Itâs your old love for me. But give that love to Jamie now. Sheâs nobler than I was . I was too crazy. I wasnât meant to grow old.â And now what he feltâor what he dreamed he feltâwas this girl crying in the darkness: crying in his arms, in his dream. âJust remember what we had, David. Nothing can erase that. No time to come will ever keep that from having existed onceâin those days when we were younger. The universe may end, but the emptiness which follows wonât wipe those days away. âHow many people in this world will ever have what we had, David? Doesnât that make you happy, to remember what we once had?â âYes, it does.â âThe only thing, David, is this. When youâll be sleeping with Jamie, will those tropical currents that we sailedâthose waters off Culebra or the Grenadines. Will they still be beating against your memories? Those Caribbean waters that we once shared. âAnd will I still be there, drowned in your arms?â âDid you drown, Cynthia? And when? And why?â âWhat does it matter, David? But the point is thisâall those days we had. All those days will be drowned too: drowned into your soul, into your memory. Those days that were once so crazy and beautiful. They were ours once, David. Goodbye.â # Now, as he was waking up, he could hear Jamie saying, âI heard you call her name, David. I heard you say it: âCynthiaâ.â âYeah, I was having a nightmare.â âYou were having a dream. And she was in your dream. Go onâdeny it.â Overhead, the moon was higher and really bright now, shining down on the crashing waves. And something in Davidâs bruised and confused mind cried out silently for some resolution to all this madness and passion. And he said impulsively but sincerely: âJamie, marry meâas soon as we can find some way to do it. You donât know what you mean to me?â She shut her eyes. âDavid, donât make me cry. I want you, David, I want you more than anything, but I canât fight what she was to you. Iâd be in washing dishes, and scrubbing the floor. And youâd be waiting and getting bored with me. And all these angel Cynthias would be flying around your head. Angel ghosts of my best friend once, David. And how could I, Davidâ? âDavid, if I could have you, all of youââ They were both standing now. âYouâve got it. All of me. Itâs you now, Jamie. Itâs over with Cynthia. Itâs just been fading out slow. âJamie, canât you feel it? Canât you feel it? Sweetheart, you will have absolutely all of meâfor all time to come.â She was still shaking her headâand then suddenly she was shouting semi-hysterically in the dark night: âThis is crazy! How can I love my dead friendâs husband? âDavid,â she screamed, âwhile she was alive, I wanted to take you away from her. Now I canât take you from her memory. I wanted you so much. And now that it seems almost possible, I canât do it.â # She hesitated for a moment, then turned abruptly and ran awayâstraight into the water: hurrying out quickly to where it was deep enough to duck under a breaking wave. And as he followed, running and diving with her, they came up together, grabbing each other. But he lost her as she shouted: âWhen Cynthia died . . .â Then a bigger than usual wave crashed over. And Jamie, drawing air into her lungs, let out one last cry: âthen we died, David.â And they both went under. And the next confused moment, when he rose to the surface, she was nowhere. He couldnât see her. Everything was black, and she was lostâher head, her shoulders. Nothing was visible. âJamie, Jamie,â he was calling as another wave smashed over him: engulfing him, choking him. And he struggled to the top, surfacing again, swimming crazily nowâslashing into the crashing waves as he zigzagged back and forth. He had no idea where she was, or where he himself was, or how far from where heâd plunged inâor how long heâd been in this frothing ocean. Then he heard itâa scream like the cry of a lost soul in despair in some vampire hell. Yes, God, yes! But when he reached her, she seemed already goneâdead weight on his arm as he flailed and fought through the surf and swirling sand. Until finally he could feel solid sand under him. And he was clawing his way up the shore with Jamie against him, still in his arms. # But she was breathing. So for a long while he lay beside her. And time passedâlike forever, a really long timeâuntil she was able to stand up again: getting to her feet shakily and moving away. But then turning to say nothing but âGoodbye.â He picked himself up. âIâll find you, Jamie.â She turned again, saying, âIt was youâalways you. You were it. Youâll have that. Iâll still have that.â âJust marry me: the minute we can,â he said. Her smile: so close. But a broken smile, almost sardonic. âWhat? And live happily ever after? Itâs too late for that now, baby. Sorry. I canât do the happy-ever-after thing.â He felt helplessâexhausted. He couldnât hold her by force. He was following her hopelessly. # In the village mall, he waited in La Cantina while she went into a bathroom to dress. Now Jerry joined him, coming over from a pool table. âWhatâs happening? Youâre beat up.â âJust some scratchesâfrom the surf: nothing.â Jamie nowâcoming from the bathroom in street clothes: the image of gloom and dejection. And, of course, she was walking right past both of them without saying a wordâjust raising her hand and waving her fingers as she went away. âWhat the devil!â Jerry said. He was agitated. âWhatâs happening? Whyâre you letting her go?â âI donât know.â âGrab her, man. We need her.â âI know. I know. But we canât stop her now. Sheâs in some deep mood right nowâmaybe in shock.â âBecause of Cynthia? Because she thinks you canât shake off Cynthia?â âMaybe. Maybe thatâs it. I donât know, Jerry. I donât know anymore.â âDamn! I wish I could help you, man.â âYou can. Youâre helping. Youâre my best friend.â Now both of them were turning, looking out at the waterâtheir gaze straying down the beach: towards some faraway lights at the limits of vision. Lights of some place where, someday, it might be nice to hang outâ âjust to be there someday: with some girl on that day, and on all the days to come: Days that may never come. âSo where do we go?â Jerry asked. âLetâs go to the beach.â Jerry laughed. âWeâre at the beach now, man.â âLetâs go to some other beach.â James Foley farandthen@gmail.com www.beyondthewind.com www.mywarlove.com |