Contest #77 winner 🏆

169 comments

Sad Inspirational Speculative

I see a flock of white sprites falling from the sky. They are small, insignificant beings made of ice with a guaranteed lifespan of nothing more than a few seconds. My face is so close to the glass that I can feel the frigid air slip in through the small wooden openings. I see our parents outside digging up the graves. Dad’s gray overcoat is unnaturally thick, stiffening his movements, while Mom stands beside him, hovering and wearing a long black dress that dangles slightly above the frosty ground.


Today resonates a bit differently with me. I wish you were here, that you had let me take your place. Mom and Dad keep busy; digging up the graves, making space in the cemetery for new tributes that will soon occupy their freshly carved burials. I imagine that they ceaselessly think of you. Maybe while they’re out there with their shovels, they speak to you. Mom probably tears up while recalling little fragments of your younger days. Dad probably keeps his emotions restrained beneath his brute armored persona, suffocating himself while choking back his tears, only to keep Mom from witnessing what he feels. I think Mom is the strong one, that she better copes with death; after all, the cemetery does belong to her family, she still prepares the bodies of the deceased, while Dad’s only responsibility is to help out digging the holes.


It’s not the first day of winter, but the snowiest day by far. White fluff decorates the gravestone in our family's cemetery, masking some of the letters on the tombs and killing off the flowers that any visitors may have left behind. The day has an odd peacefulness, a looming silence. I hear your voice in the back of my head say, "What a beautiful day to die."


Past the cemetery, I can spot the frozen lake. I see images of our younger selves skating along the thin ice. Your doppelganger looks at the younger version of me, helps her keep balance by locking hands. They smile at each other, your copy pulls my copy further to the center of our private rink and they then glide like petals following a gentle swirling current.


I hate seeing us out there. I detest what the lake reminds me of; it makes me think of you, of us and causes my eyes to swell and burn.


“Why did you do it?” I whisper to myself, hoping that my question reaches your spirit on the lake. “Why did you save me? Why did you have to die?”


I hear the front door creak open, giving a chilly gale permission to invade our home and wisp past the corridors. The door slams shut, and Mom rushes past me into the kitchen. Dad walks by, his eyes meet my shoulder, he says nothing but his face leaves behind a message. The house is suddenly filled with the sounds of clanks and cabinets being opened and closed as Mom prepares breakfast.


“Tea or coffee?” she shouts.


“Tea,” Dad responds.


“Whatever,” is all I say.


I feel like a hostage in my own home. Mom and Dad sustain a routine of working in the mornings, making meals, answering telephone calls, and calming down whoever is on the other side of the line, comforting random families who have lost their loved ones. I resent them. Life is so fickle and short; death is always lurking like a shadow. Yet, on days like this one, our parents occupy themselves with work and dig up holes; they don’t seem to mourn, they don’t seem to remember.


I wonder if they let you melt and fade like the snow. It’s probably easier for our parents than it is for me. Mom and Dad just don’t see you as I do. They bury others, suffocate the remaining souls of idle and limp bodies with dirt and gravel. They bury themselves with work and responsibility; they bury me in silence. I bury myself in isolation, with blame and regret. I toy with the past and let it seep into the present. I drown myself daily in your presence. I remember you, the cemetery, the ice, how I buried you.


*


Business is booming; Mom and Dad just can’t sit still. Winter is profitable, especially for a family that deals with death. Every day the phone rings with calls from people who have lost someone. Patients dying from hypothermic shock at the hospital, people slipping and bashing their heads on the icy pavements of their frozen driveways.


The cobblestone path that leads to the cemetery is frozen over. The trees and branches have been coated, and the wretched lake is almost silver from all the ice. Our parents are outside, getting another gravesite ready; most likely, it will be filled by the end of the day. The telephone rings, but I refuse to answer it. I reject the idea of assisting Mom and Dad with their work. Who wants to bury someone more than once? The telephone rings again, the invasive chime crawls under my skin, causes my teeth to grit. I pick it up.


“Is this the Castor Family Mortuary?” the voice on the line questions.


“Yes, it is. Do you want me to call my parents?”


“No, that won’t be necessary. Can you give'em a message for me?”


“Alright,” I murmur.


“Tell'em a body should be arriving in about two hours.”


“What? A body? Maybe they should talk to you instead?”


My hands begin to shake. Part of me wants to hang up, to rip the cord from the phone.


“No, no. You’re their daughter, right? Just pass on the message. The body of a young boy should be arriving in about two hours.”


There’s a silence; I feel nothing; I feel numb.


The voice on the line questions irritatingly. “Hello, did you get everything?”


I choke out a response, “Yeah. Young boy. Arriving in two hours. I’ll tell them.”


“Oh, I almost forgot. The boy is a drowning victim, so the family wants a closed casket, alright?”


I freeze up. The phone slips through my fingers, smacks against the floor, dangles, and sways from its wire. The room expands and contracts like a lung, pounding faster and faster, until there is nothing but silence.


A shot of cold air whips against my neck and back, shivers run up my spine. Mom closes the front door, comes up behind me like a ghoul. “Is someone on the phone?” she asks. “Hello, earth to Clara, is someone on the phone?”


I dodge the question. I run to the living room; I want to run even farther.


Mom picks up the suspending phone. “Castor Family Mortuary!” she informs. “Okay. Uh-huh. Two hours got it.”


Mom hangs up. She peeks her head into the living room to catch sight of me curled up on the bay window. She sighs.


“Everything alright?”


I offer her silence. The drowning sound of no response.


“Okay, then. I’ll be outside if you need anything.”


Water floods my eyes. My vision begins to blur. “H..H…How? How can you…How can you do this?”


Mom walks my way with a slow and dubious stride, like a hungry but frightened stray.


She sits by me. “What do you mean?” she asks, fully understanding the question.


“How can… How can you do this? Bury people?”


“Well, it is my family’s line of work.”


“No, not that,” I respond. “How can you keep doing this, ever since David…”


“Ever since your brother died,” she interjects.


I nod with my eyes and not my head.


“Clara, I celebrate David daily. I bury him every day, every hour. I see him in everyone, even more so when I have to bury a young man.”


Mom places her hands on my knee, it’s freezing, but it’s the warmest she has ever been.


“If you want, maybe you could come out. Um… the body should be here in a few hours.”


I’m not able to offer her an answer.


“But only if you want,” she replies.


*


The body of the boy will be arriving soon. The lake calls out to me, taunts me with your invocation, and cows me into a nightmare. I see you and me, our past reflections floating along the crisp ice. I lose balance and fall, crashing my knees against the thin frozen plane of the lake.


“Ouch!” I whimper.


You skate towards me, squat by my side.


“Are you okay, Clara?”


“I’m fine,” I respond all giggly.


Suddenly a crack interrupts our laughter. A series of sharp rifts stream along the ice.


“Don’t move. Stay how you are.”


“David, I’m scared.”


“It’s fine, Clara, just don’t move; we don’t want more of the ice breaking,” you say.


I hold back my fear, along with my tears. I reduce even the sound of my breath, hoping that it’s enough to calm the ice.


“Clara, I want you to get on all fours, crawl to where the ice is not cracking.”


“I…I can’t,” I protest.


“You can,” he returns. “Just crawl slowly and don’t pay attention to the ice.”


I get down on all fours. I move on my hands and knees, inching my body forward as you follow.


The cracks cut my path, the ground vibrates, it breathes. My vision sinks, and the cold darkness envelopes me. I see nothing in front of me. There’s an overlaying shadow expanding from below. I see jagged shards above, floating puzzle pieces, and specks of light.


Something wraps around my waist, it’s you, David. You hug me, hold me tight. You launch our tethered bodies forward, you reach for an edge above the water. Your iron grip takes hold of the frozen extremity of the lake. You pull me like an anchor, toss me to safety, beach me like a whale.


“Clara, are you okay?” You tap my body like a drum. My eyes open. “Clara, can you hear me?”


“Yes,” I weakly reply.


“Thank goodness!” You smile. Your weight relaxes, and your shoulders loosen. You rest your hands behind your back, your palms slightly push against the ice.


Cracks ring around your body, enclose you rapidly, split the ice between us. Your eyes widen. I swear, I see you gulp. The lake draws you in. I turn and extend my arm. I see your body dipping into the water, your hand setting like the sun. I touch the end of your fingers, feel their frozen tips. Your blurry silhouette melts in the water. Fades. I let you go, I can’t save you, so I let the water bury you instead.


*


The body of the young boy arrives, a black van parks outside our home. Mom and Dad are waiting by the cemetery entrance. I look further behind the graves, peering to your old burial sight that is the frozen lake. I see you, and you look at me. Your skin isn't sallow. You don’t appear to be cold. White droplets surround you, and for a moment, you look perfect.


I'm going to imagine that the boy in the casket is you. Mom buries you every day, I think Dad does too. I stand, make my way for the door. I’m greeted by the cold air and by a performance of dancing snow. I make way to the cobblestone path that leads to the cemetery, the place where I will bury you. The trail is stone cold, my feet begin to curl. I waddle; I take small steps. Mom and Dad are now already inside the cemetery.


“Wait for me!” I fire. “I’m coming!” The path is slippery, and I’m not good at moving on ice; you know that David; but I'm almost there.


Today I will recall myself of you, but not by the lake. I’ll make it to the cemetery to put you to rest, and I'll grip Mom and Dad's hands tightly while you're sinking to the ground. I guess that in the end, David, today is actually a beautiful day for you to die.


January 16, 2021 15:02

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169 comments

Joey Rain
01:12 May 29, 2021

I liked this story. Really put a nice perspective on all of it and your descriptions are beautifully detailed without overloading you with it. It was a bittersweet truth of a story. I'm not very good with words honestly, but I enjoyed reading this even if it did break my heart xD

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Sherly Fuentes
20:22 May 19, 2021

Beautifully written!!!

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LARA LEE
21:44 Apr 22, 2021

i love how it ends its depressing but its also good and i love it

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S K
10:56 Apr 16, 2021

I would like to appreciate the fine details you add in here. The reader actually feels like a part of the story. Wonderful job!

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15:19 Mar 19, 2021

An amazing story. I vividly saw the amount of pain the girl had. She is in the middle of inescapable family trade that would force her remember her lost brother some time ago. And every time a body arrives for that matter. Eventually, I admired the way she reconciled with grief. Saying farewell to somebody's son to finally let go of David. What a story! Please write more, for us laymen, destined to not to create but admire.

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Saurabh Singh
02:46 Mar 17, 2021

Heavy emotion almost makes me to imagine!

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Branden Kerr
08:53 Mar 06, 2021

I cried lol

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Mustang Patty
09:50 Mar 04, 2021

Hi, Thank you for sharing your story. It’s easy to see why you won – Congratulations! I am putting together an Anthology of Short Stories to be published in late Spring 2021. Would you be interested? The details can be found on my website: www.mustangpatty1029.com on page '2021 Indie Authors' Short Story Anthology,' and you can see our latest completed project on Amazon. '2020 Indie Authors' Short Story Anthology.' (It is available as a Kindle Unlimited selection.) Feel free to reach out to me: patty@mustangpatty1029.com Thank you for shar...

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00:54 Feb 24, 2021

How long does this go?! No stealing my info

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Izzie Q.
04:11 Feb 23, 2021

hi! title was great, you hooked me in on the first line, and you are GREAT at including diolouge!! well deserved win, we should totally chat more!!

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Beth O.
19:17 Feb 17, 2021

Wow, beautiful story. :) Great job, you deserved the win!

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Praise Abraham
09:00 Feb 13, 2021

I got emotional at the flashback that revealed how David died. Nice and unique plot. I'll keep this quote from the story: "Life is so fickle and short". You absolutely deserved the win. 💖⭐

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Tao Down
13:36 Feb 10, 2021

Omg it is good but it is also sad and yeah why did he have to die good story btw I like you ideas.

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08:09 Feb 08, 2021

I chocked up on reading this. Amazing. Well written. The descriptions of that particular cold winter morning was also splendid.

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Mango Chutney
03:45 Feb 07, 2021

Awesome Story.. ! Congratulations on your win...

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Lilus Endy
18:56 Feb 06, 2021

This actually melted my heart, literally speaking David reminded me of jack frost, but this . This really has my heart, i cannot express it in words what am i feeling after reading this beautiful piece. Thankyou for writing this, this deserved a win!!

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Aman Fatima
15:19 Feb 06, 2021

Congrats! Its a beautiful story, it deserved to win.

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20:36 Feb 05, 2021

This was amazing! Congrats on your win!

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Philip Hedges
13:44 Feb 05, 2021

Wow...I'm in awe. This story is so vivid, it grabbed me by the collar and didn't let go until the end. Well deserved win. I would highly appreciate if you'd read my submission to last week's contest. Best, Philip

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Russel Ibay
10:59 Feb 05, 2021

Hi, I like your story and I want to congratulate you from winning. I am currently doing an activity on the subject literature. I was instructed to discuss the most recent story I have read. I want to discuss your story but there is one thing that I need to know. There is a question ' what is the country of origin of the story' and I am afraid I can't answer it. I would be so much happy if you help me, sir. I just want to know what country do you live in to answer the question I am lacking.

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