Hugo-
Day one, the hottest day in July. The kind of hot that makes the neighbors forgo underwear and plant themselves in front of oscillating fans. Feet planted in small kiddie pools filled with tepid tap water, topped off with bagged ice from the corner market. The breeze from the fan casting across the iced pools does nothing to diminish the warmth from their radiating bodies. Instead it pushes the sweat further across their faces and thighs until they are all shiny with sweat.
It’s nearly impossible to forget day one. You try, yet day one is the day you’ll scramble for breath. You’ll put on the bravest of faces to give your daughter Thea oxygen as you hold the side of her head to your chest. She will appreciate the firm pressure you apply to her quivering body. The grief inundating from her youthful frame, forcing you back- one, two, three, steps until you both collapse onto the couch. Sweat and tears, they’re all the same.
How can a girl live without her mother? How will I breathe without her modeling what a strong exhale looks like?
It will be all she can say.
You wonder in your emotional greed, Where does she keep all of the passwords? Thea’s birth certificate? Is she allergic to anything?
Raeann-
Their day one is polar opposite of your day one. The body that carried you through life for the past four decades decided the narrative of living a nice long life is a lie. To find out that you’re going to die is far less painful than hearing that you are dead. The dead don’t hear pain. The dead don’t feel it either.
It’s terminal, you have weeks at best Raeann. I’m so sorry.
You are sent home with instructions of getting your affairs in order. Pamphlets titled, “How to tell your loved ones that you are dying,” as if there is a simple bullet point plan to button up all of your affairs before you go.
Step 1, I’m dying. But I left a few lasagnas in the freezer for busy nights.
Hugo-
Planning a funeral is foreboding. The weatherman says to expect more heat hazes. You don’t know exactly what that is, but you’ve already spent hours on the internet searching for a cure. What's another few minutes?
Heat haze: also called heat shimmer, refers to the inferior mirage observed when viewing objects through a mass of heated air.
Relief floods your body, panic eases up. This isn’t the end, it’s all a mirage. It has to be.
Raeann-
Everything after the first day is now called the in between, and that’s just how you’ve come to accept it. Call your mother more, but not so much that she suspects that there is something to be worried about. Mothers know.
Revel in the fact that the word hug happens to be the first three letters of your husband's name, as he is the best hugger you’ve ever met. Hugging him a little bit longer feels like a possible cure for the incurable.
Forget the pamphlets, your family deserves a better send off than that. The blogs online say to leave a video diary for your daughter because she might forget the way the dimples tucked into your cheeks are deep enough to hold a cat's eye marble in each of them.
Don’t let her forget.
The idea of a camera taping your face not looking like your face is unsettling. It is then you decide on cassettes, they’re the happy medium. Even if cassette tapes are “so out of style,” they might be even more treasured due to the rarity of them.
Nothing screams a mothers legacy like antiquated methods of communication. Might as well break out the typewriter and ribbon of ink.
Hugo-
In-laws, they’re a mixed bag. Naturally they have known your beloved Raeann for the longest. They created her so there is ownership there.
Let them visit and call and video chat.
It’s all that they will get of her.
You’ll be left with the daughter you share, and the smell of her lilac shampoo on the bed linens you agreed to buy at the big box store. The in-laws won’t get to smell her again, but you will, at least a little longer before the next load goes in the wash.
Raeann-
To make a mixed tape you have to consider two things:
Who you’re making the tape for and the occasion.
Remind yourself that this isn’t a John Hughes movie, and Thea won’t be walking away with the love of her life but rather losing you. Of course there are times when you hear a little melody on the radio and think to yourself, Thea would love this song. Then, add bits of wisdom and sayings to the playlists, for days when she needs advice but you aren’t there to give it.
A mother knows exactly what kind of music will make her daughters eyes sparkle, even if it is followed by a tiny eye roll. It’s some kind of magic to possess this kind of knowing about a teenager even if she is your child.
You wonder if anyone else will ever know your daughter this way.
Hugo-
She told you that there’d be tapes. That you’d have to give them to Thea, maybe one morning as you sip your coffee black and dark roasted the way that you like it.
It’s important Hugo, it’s all I have left to give her. Well, and you of course.
Those dimples, you won’t be able to say no to her and so you agree with a gentle head nod and deep hug.
Through sickness and health was the vow? What about death and grief, what’s the vow look like after that?
More haziness.
Raeann-
Your last day comes twenty-nine days after your first. Cliche, that’s what the last thirty days will be. Like a film reel, memories click and spin for one last viewing in your mind's eye. Not in black and white, but in vibrant colors of finger painted construction paper and alabaster hydrangeas in wedding centerpieces.
Wait until Thea nods off in the corner chair of your room, wrapped in the blanket you both sewed together out of your old shirts. Absorb the tiny bit of warmth from Hugo’s hand wrapped around the frail fingers on yours. These hands spent many hours laced together over the years and now his hands will spend hours pressing play for Thea.
It’s time for your strong exhale.
Hugo-
Pull the old cassette player down from the attic, blow off the decades of dust.
Imagine the look on your daughter’s face when the carefully curated tapes are placed in her young hands with three freckles alongside the edge of her knuckles. The freckles lightly kiss her milky skin, and you breathe out a little in relief knowing that they look ordinary.
She won’t want the tapes. Her eyes might brim with orbs of salted water. A sense of begging will slip past her lips, Please daddy I’m not ready yet.
You stare at the dimples she inherited from her mother, pressing your warm thumb into one of them as you hold gently to her chin. Picturing the future, you wonder who will take her wedding dress shopping, and who will take her phone calls if she loses a baby.
It will be you of course.
Press play.
You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.
257 comments
Very well-written, and so poignant. Loved it!
Reply
Thank you Thomas
Reply
Well done, I was not confused at all, you did the lead changes tags very well. Congrats on the win,
Reply
I'm so happy to hear that it felt clear. I hoped that the names preceding each section would do that. Thank you for reading!
Reply
Oh my gosh, Shea. I am late to this story, but so taken with it that I had to read it twice. Your writing is so beautiful, insightful and nuanced. Usually, I like to pick a few of my favorite lines, but in this story, every time I thought I found my favorite line, I realized the next one was my favorite line. I also liked that as sad and poignant as it was, it didn’t feel tragic. I mean there was so much love and humanity that came through, that I had the sense it would endure and support Hugo and Thea even as they grieved. I found so ...
Reply
Kristin your words mean so much thank you. I wrote this in the front seat of my car at my sons baseball practice, annoyed that I wasn't home in a comfortable seat typing away. I love that it didn't feel tragic, I was hopeful to show that Raeann held some sort of composure and power in how she left the world because she knew that her two people would be okay.
Reply
I applaud you for writing out of your physical comfort zone. My best friend is a writer too and she does everything longhand. She inspired me to do that too and I have taken to scribbling the ideas and beginnings of my stories in a notebook. I love the freedom of sitting under a tree or in my car or on my couch doing that - unfortunately, time constraints mean I have to take it to the computer by a certain day, but I like the longhand start. And yes, the composure and strength of Raeann balanced out the sadness. That’s why I loved the...
Reply
I often text myself ideas that come to me in my head. Then I'll wake up in the morning and go, "Hm, I wonder who texted me?" It's me, I texted me.
Reply
Shea, I wish I had had the time to read this sooner. The split POV is great, and so hard off pull off sometimes. Great quality prose all throughout the piece, and that last line was such a great way to end. I hate when a prompt "determines" a set time. It's something that I have difficult wrapping my head around, the idea of writing something short that takes place in a set time limit can seem so daunting, yet you pulled this off brilliantly! What an inspiring piece.
Reply
Thank you so much K! The timeline does feel tricky to me too, I freak out that I can't get the story conveyed well when that's the prompt. Prose seems to be something I've easily fallen into when I write simmering sad, but I'm glad it came off well!
Reply
Congrats Shea!! Such a deserved win!!
Reply
Wow. This was heart-wrenching, gut-wrenching. With sad stories, you run the risk of melodramatic, but this story did not fall into that trap at all. The sadness was perfectly balanced with tenderness. Favorite lines: - "The kind of hot that makes the neighbors forgo underwear and plant themselves in front of oscillating fans." - what a creative way to describe heat. - "I’m dying. But I left a few lasagnas in the freezer for busy nights." - just wow. Life moves on... - "Her eyes might brim with orbs of salted water." - Awesomely descriptive...
Reply
Hey, Thanks for giving it a read and leaving your thoughts on it. It's been a while since I revisited this story of mine. But I'm so glad you enjoyed it.
Reply
This story was amazing. You deserve to win!
Reply
Thank you so much!!
Reply
Congratulations on a very well deserved win!
Reply
Thank you!
Reply
one of the best storie i have ever read..love the ending..thankyouu for giving us so much more than we expected....loads of love..
Reply
Thank you very much Neha!
Reply
How easy or difficult it is to remember someone's birthday? Especially when that someone is your best friend! Read this story to know more - https://vineelwrites.blogspot.com/2021/06/happy-birthday.html
Reply
Wow, Shea. I can't believe it took me so long to get around to reading this! Absolutely amazing. I love your use of POV — I was actually toying with second person for my next piece. You executed it flawlessly, it hit me like a truck. Such a well-deserved win! That last line... Goddamn. My heart aches after reading this, but in the very best way. I can't compliment this enough.
Reply
Hey thank you so much Joshua. I'll admit, I read 2nd POV many times on this platform and thought, "I could never do that." It felt out of reach to even try. Then I wrote this and it just felt I dunno, right? I've always loved the sentiment that goes into making a mixed tape for someone. It takes a lot of love to really know what to put on them. You're compliments man so much, as I admire the way you create your own stories- Thank you!
Reply
Wow! This was an amazing story! Really liked that the dialogues were minimum but the thought bubbles were more than enough to convey the message. Also, the POVs of the story, the way you switched between Hugo and Raeann was awesome! Loved every bit of it.
Reply
I'm so happy to hear you liked it Dhwani. Thank you for reading it.
Reply
Please recommend some more of your stories...
Reply
Smile Dahlias in the Bucket An Alligator Hug If you feel so inclined these are 3 of my faves that I've written☺
Reply
Wow. I am at a loss for words. This was so beautiful. The way it made me feel so sad is outstanding. You really know how to articulate your words so well.
Reply
Thank you!
Reply
A beautiful, well-deserved win! Well done Shea!
Reply
Thank you Malcolm for reading and commenting :)
Reply
This is a beautiful story, it is so sad but also comforting. I liked the switching of POVs, it really helped give an insight of the grief every character was experiencing in different ways.
Reply
The nuances layered in sadness made me want to switch pov's. Thank you for reading!
Reply
Oh my god those dimples. This was beautiful.
Reply
Thank you so much Esther :)
Reply
😭😭😭 this made me tear up. So beautifully written. Can't imagine the pain :(((
Reply
Thank you😊
Reply
Great story !!
Reply
Thank you☺
Reply
Beautiful. This story was simply beautiful, and what a well deserved win! Congrats!
Reply
Thank you so much Isabelle. I'm glad you liked it.
Reply
Your story really made me feel all types of senses and it all tied together so nice at the end. It really made my body sink, you were able to put me in the perspective of the main character so greatly, I felt as if I had a connection with the mother herself. One thing I would change is your transition because the plot switching so rapidly caught me off guard. There was no buildup but the ending did tie everything together like I said in my opening sentence. I was confused at first on how it started, going from describing a hot summer day to ...
Reply
I feel confident in how I transitioned throughout the story. The idea is that there's no time for a build up, as her life was cut short with not much time to be worked up about much. There was time to get her affairs in order. The heat is part of the grief, as it's a theme I work throughout the entire story. You're allowed to interpret this story in your own way, even if it leads you to feeling devastated and bored all at once ;)
Reply
congrats on winning
Reply
Thank you Olivia😊
Reply