Chapter 1
Me and John always fit together. Our bodies, our minds. We were like a jigsaw piece, each corner smooth and perfectly aligned with an equally smooth incave in the matching piece. Yet, each piece had its own faults that gave it character and personality. And then maybe those gaps grew wider without me realising. Or maybe I put a wrong piece in somewhere and set the balance off. Either way, all I know is now I’m alone in the world. John won’t even talk to me. He should know all that bullshit about Cooper and me was pure school drama. Only this time, instead of reading the latest issue of scholars weekly (the shitty unofficial school news site), with Marylin, I heard it through the ever so subtle grape vine. Or should I just say just a boring regular vine, that one that runs down the side of the stall in the girl’s bathroom to be precise. But I guess I had it coming. I could have treated John better. But that’s the least of my concerns.
I could never grow accustomed to the silence though. Without Marylin going on and on about how the term anarco-communism has enabled the growth of socialism and white people should stop viewing all political and economic issues through the myopic lens of their own self actualisation. Then insert the actual quote from Bo Burnham, cause Marylin could never forget a piece of social commentary. I guess some of it must have stayed in my head, because I can’t help thinking about police funding as I pass by one of the missing girl posters in the window of that new trendy café on Mercinary Street.
Marylin has been missing a whole week now. It was just last week we went for coffee there. And Marylin took me on a journey through Brazil as she exclaimed over the knowledge of the baristas there. She’s a bit of a “coffee head” as our foster mom would say. Hey, I guess I still have her. Only all the answers to my questions must lie at the end of a bottle somewhere.
School is just as dismal as it has been for the last week. Between looks of sympathy and vengeance I can’t figure out if I should run or fight. Sure, I allegedly cheated on Saint John, basketball superstar (even though Cooper is just as good), but it’s not like I broke everyone else’s heart. When I get home I take a shower, the remanence of my attempt at cleaning the word slut from my desk slowly but surely washes away. I shave, and after noticing the top missing from Marylin’s razor I suddenly feel sick. I guess my right leg can get the chop tomorrow, I won’t be wearing shorts anyway, nothing but long skirts for me now. But part of me is whispering; “give them something to talk about”.
I decide to finish shaving and on my way into my room I almost trip over the book. Her book. How could I leave it just lying around there. I haven’t opened it yet, but after Jerry Macaulay told me he was sorry for my loss today I guess now’s the time. I always new she wrote poetry in here, but I never read it. I wanted her to read it to me someday when she had the confidence. But who knows, there could be a clue in here somewhere. And God knows I’m the only one still looking for those. The police haven’t done shit. But I need the silence to stop. So, I open it and read aloud, as if she was right here next to me.
Chapter 2
Page 1
Ignorance is bliss they say
And it is, oh it is
But what about those without the luxury
Without the astuteness to look away
At what point does ignorance become neglect
Before or after it turns to disdain?
The forbearance of it is to be admired
But it’s contagion should be headed
Enticing as it is
Bliss among the purported
You must ask yourself
At what point does ignorance become a crime
I am still pondering at what point does ignorance become a crime, when I get home the next day. Was I the ignorant one? Should I have noticed something. Have I missed something? I should really read the whole book, but I couldn’t do it. Not yet. Not until she can come home and tell me how it ends herself. So, I decide to take it one page at a time. Just one little remark a day, one poem a night to help me forget about that night with Cooper, because lying to myself is beginning to get tiresome.
Page 2
There’s no shame in going through the motions
It’s okay if today’s best isn’t yesterday’s
I head out on my bike the next day, looking, again. I swing by Aoife’s house but she’s not there. I want to get this whole cheating thing straight with her, because if she believes it, she’ll never be my friend again. But the silence isn’t so loud anymore, not after reading it. Reading her.
Page 3
I am selfish
And all that is encompassed by it
I take and take and take
Under the delusion that I do it for them
I listen
But I really am studying my prey
Be careful what you say
For every little bit of yourself you give away
Can be used against you
I am selfish
And more than you mean by it
I give and give and give
Far more than could ever be returned
I bathe in the guilt I have created
I find sanity in my self-destruction
I am selfish
Chapter 3
Page 10
The darkness calls my name
We dance each night
I have made promises I know I cannot keep
Been willingly seduced
She tenderly lays me down
The sheets are warm and safe
But when I must leave her in the morning
She douses me in guilt and anger
A part of her comes with me,
More of her each day
Begging me to go back with her
Making promises she cannot keep
The next day is Sunday, and again I find myself on that same road, riding my bike just slow enough so I can see into the woods. Just in case. This is where she was last seen, so I guess I should be further away from here right? But there’s something about this place. Those woods. They have a different silence than the one I fight with Marylin’s words each night. It’s more tranquil, but still more foreboding. More comfortable, somehow. The unknown behind the tree line a sign of hope. It is as tough the forest becomes that ear you need, that warm hug you crave for. The shadows of the trees hide by perpetually puffy red eyes as I stride down our regular route. This is my 3rd time being here since she went missing. But I’ve brought her with me, or part of her at least.
Page 11
His hand lands on my shoulder as he strolls by,
A familiar, comfortable grip.
From behind, he breaths out the words
‘Darling’
Despite the sanguine chirp of the morning chorus
Outside the kitchen window
My body goes stiff, a familiar cold
I hold my breath, until he passes
To get his morning glass of orange juice,
Bits, ‘don’t get the one without bits’
I don’t let it out
Not until my knees go weak
My knuckles a white, cold flame
Just a cheerful, Sunday morning
But he squeezes a little too hard
Stares a little too long
I guess it was a mistake to bring it along, because now I’m sprinting back along the path and fumbling onto my bike as a tear slowly makes it’s way down the valley of my cheek. She had told me so much, without saying anything at all.
Chapter 4
Page 12
My parents don’t love each other, but who’s truly do
Love is a fragile thing
And once broken, it’s shards are as sharp as a blade
I’ve began to understand why none of us wear skirts
Began to understand my mother’s worried face as my sister applies her makeup
I hate the way he looks at us
How he touches her sometimes, her shoulders going stiff
How they act like strangers
I was never meant to be here
And she hated me for it, but at the end of the bottle
I was still his,
And now her eyes are full of a stinging regret
I only wish she wanted better for herself
But she is frozen,
A sculpture of a long-ago courage, a youthful flare,
Her pride and joy
Gone rancid, for now it has turned her to stone.
A cold silhouette of a women long lost
What me and my mother share
Something we dare not imply
Something foul
The vengeful evil of lust
Soured love, violent, suffocating.
The isolation of regret
The flaring red flame of hatred
With which we scald and scorn ourselves with.
A maternal bond formed from violence and envy
Built of shame and shushed rumours.
We are both sorry that I ever came to be
I will always be his
What me and my mother share
We never talked much about our families before foster care, it’s kinda rule number one in here. Positivity or something, right? I feel like I’ve lost all of that as I read the words aloud. The silence has become promising now. The promise of her words fills me with apprehension, and readiness. Ready to find her, to see her again. God, I am so ready. I’m ready for anything. Ready for whatever mess she’s got herself into now. Ready to bring her to rehab, again. I’ll do anything. I just ask that she come home and stop the silence I work so hard to fill.
Chapter 5
Page 13
I don’t know why I slash myself open
Perhaps for the same reason that I write
To give meaning to the suffering
For the idea that our pain is inherently meaningless
Is so much
That I would rather gauge out my own skin
Then accept such a reality
-I create my own fantasies with the blade
I’m cycling way too fast down a path way too narrow. But I don’t care anymore.
Page 14
I just lay there
My heart thumps and thumps, my chest hurts from it’s constant rebuke.
Page 15
I wish I didn’t care
And it’s selfish, I know it is
But I wish I didn’t love them
It’s fucking killing me
There’s that word again, selfish. Never in a million years would I have described Marylin as selfish. Marylin was nothing but flowers and sunsets, I thought. Scars purple as the night sky, highlighting the pale glow of her thighs. She never knew I saw, but maybe I should have said something. Because now, with her here, I’ve gone down a path into Marylin’s mind that I never knew existed. And it just goes on and on and deeper and deeper. I notice I’m only halfway through the book. How can there be this many words unspoken until now, this much gone unappreciated. Marylin had eyes that told you who she was. Hair that begged you to come closer. A smile that welcomed even her greatest enemies. Marylin was beauty, and I should have told her that. But then again, would the uttering of such words ruin what we had, or what I thought we had, or simply solidify it. I will never know, because I was too scared to tell her. I enjoy working in the silence now, this new poetry aloud. But the closer I get to the end, the darker I become. Until I can only think of her. Of the next poem, the next line. I’m and addict.
Page 19
Addiction is an all-consuming disease
That knows only the most deviant of hungers
It has but one goal
And to have just one all-consuming goal
Is the essence of what evil truly is
Chapter 6
Page 21
What I miss most?
To be able to enjoy another’s laughter
If I can’t share the happiness of another
I have lost all I had
Now I have nothing, except
The expectation to stay,
So others can live.
I stand at our spot, the forest loams ahead, the lake providing a needed respite from the judgement of the trees. Sometimes I can almost hear her here, feel her here. Aoife’s not returning my calls, and I can forget about cheerleading this year. The air is heavy with dread, and beads of sweet start to accumulate on my forehead. As they navigate their way down my face I see it, a silhouette in the dusk.
Chapter 7
Page 22
“If anyone could have saved me it would have been you”
-Virginia Woolf
I stand, frozen to the spot. And for some weird, bizarre reason I make a mental note to remember this moment. To remember the moment my heart shattered into one of those tiny pieces. Sharp as a blade. The moment I lost all the hope I had found in her. And there she is, beauty and grace, destroyed. Her golden locks hanging loose around her shoulders. So still. I would have imagined more…movement. Wind, some other sound. But there is nothing left. No birds chirping, no kids playing. Just me and her, like it always used to be. And as I approach her my stride is steady. I am no longer me but my own silhouette. And as I approach her my breathing slows, and I already know what’s written on the note in her pocket. As I approach her the purple of what was once beauty has faded into the overwhelming purple tinge that has taken over her body. As I approach her, I think of all the ways I could have told her to stay, and all the ways it wouldn’t have made a difference. Because the moment you stop repeating something to someone, they will forget it. I think back on the moment my heart broke. The moment I died. And walk straight past her towards the cliff edge.
Page 23
I am so sorry
But I must do something
I don’t expect you to forgive me
But I’d like you to forget
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2 comments
it seemed like a nice draft. there were some pretty glaring grammatical and spelling errors, but those can usually be fixed pretty quickly. it was a bit hard to follow what was going on in the story. it felt very disjointed and seemed to lack cohesion. i honestly couldn't tell you as a reader what exactly it was that the characters were doing. the first two paragraphs didn't fit in with the rest of the story at all and seemed like they had a different style altogether. i assume it was about two foster kids and one of which was addicted to dr...
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Wow this is a very moving and powerful piece! So much intense emotion and reality mixed with the imagery and poetry. “Because the moment you stop repeating something to someone, they will forget it. I think back on the moment my heart broke.” Thats my favorite line. Great job! 😻
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