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Sad Romance Fiction

7 December 2015


My Dearest Alex,


Just so you know, I’m writing you this letter in the garden of my new home, the only one on the street with high concrete walls topped with barbed wire that stabs the still air. Part of me is trying to reassure myself that I’m safe within this enclosure. However, I know very well that not even this imposing barricade can protect me from the sea salt and coconut-scented breeze slapping me across the face at this very moment, a gentle whisper of wind that, once upon a time, kissed me as tenderly as you always had. I can’t help feeling powerless as a tempest whirls inside of me and knocks out all the air in my lungs and the words from my mouth.


I’m sorry. I know you’d want me to forget, but like a windmill, my head keeps cycling back to the day Yolanda the Thief blew everything away from me, carried you away from my arms like a leaf flying in the saline breeze from the bay.


Of course, not even the strongest typhoon gusts can destroy the stone edifice of what this day is --- or well, what it was supposed to be --- to me. Today, we would have been celebrating our second wedding anniversary, two years since we would have vowed to be the wind that powered each other’s wings. I know we probably would have clinked glasses of light, airy champagne on a beach, either on the sands of very familiar mouth of Leyte Bay we had left our footprints in a myriad of times or elsewhere. I know you really didn’t care, as long as one of your cheeks was caressed by the breeze and the other, by my lips.


 All of that has been blown off the realm of reality, of course. As much as I try to run after that bliss, I know it might as well been swept up by a cyclone. All because of Yolanda the Thief. My only hope is that wherever you are, our memories are still written in the pristine shores of your heart, that no wind of time has come and erased them.


I hope the winds of time haven’t erased the day we met, the day you breathed life into me with a smile. We were in university, then. I remember how I was walking to class, inhaling the strangely intoxicating scent of petrichor in the air and letting it fill my lungs, when my umbrella flew out of my hands and into a huff of air. It must have been quite a scene: a woman with puffs of curly hair relentlessly chasing after an amethyst-coloured hunk of cloth and wire with polka dots dancing in the wind. Suddenly, though, it disappeared from my view, and a thunderstorm of panic raged inside of me. Little did I know then that a breath away, you’d tap me on the shoulder, beam at me, and hand me back the runaway item. Even in that moment I first saw that summer breeze of a smile, I knew that I wanted to weather the storms with you for the rest of our time on Earth…a time by your side that Yolanda the Thief was all too happy to cut short.


I hope the winds of time haven’t erased the night you had me listen to your favourite song. I still recall your fragrant waves, dark as Leyte Bay at midnight, dancing in the cool breeze from the half-open window of your apartment. You beamed at me so brightly, broke into a smile of cloudless summer days where there’s moisture in the air, as you popped in your copy of Dusty Springfield’s “Dusty in Memphis” album into your player. It was just the two of us, as well as an atmosphere of anticipation, when "Windmills of Your Mind" filled the air. You encouraged me to close my eyes as we listened, to lose myself in every breath the singer took along with you. When the British crooner’s voice filled the room with her sultry voice like a musky perfume, I felt your soft hand intertwine into mine. That very moment, as love bubbled and fizzed in my blood, I knew that there was no other place I’d rather be than next to you…a warm space that Yolanda the Thief was all too happy to rob.


I hope the winds of time haven’t erased the promise I made when I boarded that plane to New York. I still see your warm brown eyes, a flood of tears flowing from them at the airport’s departure area. I remember too how it all felt as if the atmosphere was sucked dry, how with every breath I took, I felt my own watery eyes weighing me down. I stared at you in that hall and whispered, almost cried, that like General McArthur did on our island in World War II, I shall return to Tacloban, to you, after my four-year Master’s Degree programme. Meanwhile, we tried to bend with the wind of distance, didn’t we? Through a phone screen, I accompanied you countless of times to the airy mouth of Leyte Bay you’ve always held dear; every single video call, you ended by blowing me a kiss. In return, you were always with me as the frosty winter gale wrapped around my body, my breath turning into puffy white clouds. You know that by now, I would have fulfilled that vow I made, written in the concrete of my soul….a vow that Yolanda the Thief was all too happy to nullify.


I hope the winds of time haven’t erased the picture of the home we were planning to build. How can I ever forget those moments sitting on the shore with you, our feet buried in powder white sand and our lungs filled with sea breeze, as we imagined a beautiful terra cotta-coloured bungalow with huge bay windows? Out of thin air, we pictured the little family we’d build --- comprised of you, me and, perhaps, a little boy with my puffs of curls and your bubbly laughter --- racing out of a sky blue door to the beach our humble abode would be planted on. Of course, you know that eventually, we were able to save up enough to purchase a slice of land next to the bay and start on building the house. Certainly, it was no mansion, but it was to be our castle in the clouds….a home that Yolanda the Thief was all too happy to hollow out until all that inhabited it were air and termites (much like me, really).


Most of all, I hope the winds of time haven’t erased you knowing how much I love you, my darling Alex. It’s been two years since you were flown away from my embrace, and still, all I whisper in the wind is your name. My mind is still a tornado, still circles around the fact that you are not next to me in this bed, that I do not share your last name like we had planned. I know. I’m supposed to start moving on from losing you like a bird flying in the gentle summer breeze, How can I, though, when all I ever wanted was for us to stay standing together, for the days of the salty bay’s perfume to last forever, for Yolanda the Thief to have never touched you?


I just want to know that even if you’re far away from me now, our years together aren’t gone with the wind for you. Just let me know that you remember me, my Alex, that I’m set in stone in your heart as you are to me. It’s all it takes for me to be okay.


Loving you until the atmosphere turns to dust,

Your Aria

****

The folded letter to the man I’m supposed to be married to is inside an envelope with clouds printed on, my favourite citrusy perfume sprayed on it before heading to this quiet garden, where only birdsong fills the atmosphere. On me is the flowy white dress that Alex always loved on me, the one he always said made me look like the cumulus clouds we stared at every time we were on the beach. This is it; it’s time to hand it to the man who once exclaimed to the summer air how excited he was to be my intended groom.


“Happy anniversary, darling,” I whisper to the wind as I come face-to-face with my Alex.


In front of me is a marble slab the colour of the skies the day my beloved was carried away from me. I trace the inscription on it with my pinky as a wave of fresh tears flood from my eyes.


Alexander Robin Corentino

21 February 1980 - 7 November 2013

Your laughter will forever fill the air around us.


I stare at the second date on my Alex’s tombstone as bile swirls inside of me like a whirlwind. 7 November 2013, the day Super Typhoon Haiyan pummelled our island: the day I begged to come back to Tacloban to be with my fiancé but no plane would dare brave the storm, the day I had to keep my eyes glued helplessly to the television as I awaited news of who survived the tempest, the day I got a phone call from the coast guard saying they found Alex’s lifeless body floating in the storm surge, the day I wished the swell would consume me alive too.


Although, we Filipinos do not call that natural disaster that ended thousands of souls Haiyan. No, it is our way to give these gusts of destruction a local name, a moniker worthy of the worst soap opera villain, a familiar label to hate. And goddamn, I absolutely loathe the name Yolanda, especially now.


Of course, for the disaster prevention council, the meteorological agency, and the government, my darling was but a tick in their tally of 6,300 casualties of Yolanda's wrath, just another body --- found in a submerged terra cotta-coloured house, robbed of life and washed away by the tide. To them, the fact that my Alex's chuckles were as gentle as a sea breeze doesn't matter as much as the fact that he perished being swept away by a force of 315 kilometres an hour. To me, though, he is the only one, the air in my lungs and he that powers my sails.


Oh right, he was. Two years on, I still can not fathom how the love of my life was snuffed out just like that, as if he were just a candle in the wind.


“Alex, darling, I miss you so much,” I manage to sputter out, puffing with every breath. “Please tell me you’re still with me. Give me a sign. Even one out of thin…..”


I gasp as suddenly, a polka-dotted umbrella the colour of a brilliant amethyst floats across the sky and lands on the marble slab above Alex’s body. From my vantage point, it looks as if invisible arms have caught it, as if an invisible summer breeze of a smile has formed in the air.



Perhaps, the winds of time haven’t erased anything, after all.


***

Tropical Cyclone Haiyan (Philippine name: Yolanda) is the second strongest landfalling tropical cyclone on record. Reaching wind speeds of up to 315 kph., the super typhoon entered the Philippines on 7 November 2013. It is the deadliest storm in Philippine history, killing around 6,300 people, as well as the costliest with damages totaling $2.98 billion.

March 03, 2024 11:27

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117 comments

John Rutherford
13:30 Mar 11, 2024

Great read Stella, your style shines through on this story. Thanks for sharing.

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Alexis Araneta
13:33 Mar 11, 2024

Thank you so much, John. Thank you for reading this.

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00:30 Mar 11, 2024

Hi Stella. I loved this story and your use of the prompt! The twist was absolutely not what I was expecting. By the way, I read your bio. I lived in Singapore for close to a decade and left last year. It’s a beautiful spot! Is that where you are? Since there’s many Filipinas living in SG I’m sure I’m not blowing your cover!

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Alexis Araneta
01:50 Mar 11, 2024

Hi, Natasha ! Thank you so much for your kind words. Yes, I wanted to play with the fact that the storm is known by a woman's name in the Philippines. Glad the twist worked for you. I live in Manila. Hahahaha ! I have to laugh at blowing my cover. Actually, someone on Reedsy already knows my real identity. Hahahaha !

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02:23 Mar 11, 2024

I’ve been to Cebu and Boracay but not Manila! So the typical tourist traps, haha! Beautiful country and beautiful people!

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Alexis Araneta
02:27 Mar 11, 2024

Hahahaha ! I don't mind tourist traps if they're as lovely as Boracay. Hahahaha !

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Claire Trbovic
19:47 Mar 10, 2024

So so so clever, loved the format, the repetition in the letter worked so well, as well as the umbrella link at the end. Such a well formed story, emotive, wonderful factual link at the end. No notes! Take a bow!

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Alexis Araneta
23:08 Mar 10, 2024

Oh my, Claire ! Thank you so much. It means so much coming from a writer here I admire so much. Like I said in a previous comment, I had actually had something else in mind for the first part of the story, but it felt clunky. So, I thought of this instead. I'm so happy you liked it !

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Corbin Russell
01:55 Mar 10, 2024

I do enjoy internal rhyme! “ That very moment, as love bubbled and fizzed in my blood…” It is an almost subconscious pin in a map. I do feel like the first half (the letter?) hadn’t been so prosaic. It seems to me that a letter would be more personal and not rely on so many overt details. I found the second part to be a better place maybe for that kind of story telling. But that is just my observation! Well crafted and enjoyable to read and think about.

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Alexis Araneta
02:32 Mar 10, 2024

Oooh, I didn't even realise I did some internal rhyme there. As for the letter, well, that's actually how I write letters in real life. Hahahaha ! Thanks for reading. Glad you liked it.

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Corbin Russell
02:44 Mar 10, 2024

Sure thing. Say, I am new to this blog and I want to give honest, sincere, but constructive feedback. As someone who is more veteran at this community, do you have any advice? It’s not my first rodeo, so I use “the author” this-and-that rather than “you” this-and-that. Any pointers so I don’t misstep?

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Alexis Araneta
02:57 Mar 10, 2024

Well, firstly, I've only been posting here since December 2023, so I don't know if I could consider myself a veteran. Hahahaha ! I think just be honest about what you think of the stories. There's no set pattern about what to say or what not to. And yes, using "you" is no problem. We're not writing a dissertation where you have to refrain from the second person. Hahaha !

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Kristi Gott
21:04 Mar 09, 2024

Beyond incredible! I feel the authentic emotional truth in this story. The sensory details and imagery are the most magical and vivid. I lost the love of my life - my soulmate-husband to cancer and I can relate so well to this. I felt like the cancer that took him was something that could have a name, like the storm in this story. Why and how kept echoing in my mind. I feel it too. It is so evocative. An incredible tribute to someone who passed. This is amazing writing that uses such creative imagery to get the feelings and ideas acr...

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Alexis Araneta
23:15 Mar 09, 2024

Oh my ! Thank you so much, Kristi. Like I said in other comments, I immediately knew what to write about when I saw the prompts. Although I've never been in Aria's shoes, I imagined how difficult it would be if I lost the love of my life, especially so suddenly like this. I'm so sorry for your loss. I hope I was able to at least come close to being authentic about that feeling of losing a soulmate. This comment means so much to me. Glad you liked it, Kristi !

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Mariana Aguirre
20:16 Mar 09, 2024

Love it 👏

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Alexis Araneta
23:07 Mar 09, 2024

Thank you so much !

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Mariana Aguirre
23:36 Mar 09, 2024

Ofc 😁

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Murray Burns
20:11 Mar 09, 2024

For some reason, a comment from one of my professors... many years ago... comes to mind when reading your story- "You want the reader to appreciate the artistry of the author without losing track of the story." I think Yolanda fits the description. And... I once had a roommate...again many years ago... from the Philippines- near Cabanatuan.

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Alexis Araneta
23:07 Mar 09, 2024

That is a lovely way to put it Murray. I'm very glad I was able to combine artistry and telling a story. Thank you for reading. Glad you liked it !

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Mary Bendickson
01:29 Mar 04, 2024

Windy story. Nice how you kept that theme going throughout. Kind of suspected Yolanda was not a new love interest. They had so much going for them. Again a masterful telling. I lived through Hurricane Ike so I thought of making that my story this week. It won't hold a candle to yours.

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Alexis Araneta
01:40 Mar 04, 2024

Thank you so much, Mary. I'm glad you liked it. Yes, I wanted to take advantage of the fact that the storm is known by a woman's name in my country. I'm sure you'll do amazingly with your story, as usual. Glad you liked it !

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Jonathan Page
15:18 Mar 03, 2024

Wow, Stella! Absolutely fantastic tale! Your take on the prompt is brilliant, as you center the story on a wind event, but use the wind in so many other ways, metaphorically as applied to memory, in the scene with the protagonist and Alex meeting, and in so many other places. Great work! You've got a love story, framed inside of a tale of tragedy, inspired by a real-life disaster. Epistolary format. Message in a bottle idea. Great interiority and sensory language. And even a nice theme about the meaning of loss, what is lost and what isn't.

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Alexis Araneta
15:46 Mar 03, 2024

Jonathan, it means so much coming from you. Thank you so much ! Just like last weeks flower story, I wanted to centre the imagery around wind and air since, well, that's the theme, but also because a storm is the "antagonist" of the story. The letter idea actually came maybe 1/4 of the way into writing the first half of the story. It was originally going to be Aria's friend recounting why she was rendered mute. However, I felt it was too cluttered, so I went with the epistolary form. Glad you liked it ! Thank you for reading this.

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Christy Morgan
14:11 Mar 03, 2024

Once again, you employ a perfect and unique take with the prompt, Stella. Your language and phrasings are rich with movement, from gentle breezes all the way to catastrophic winds. You lure the reader into their love story, a beckoning like that first, crisp autumn gust. I have to confess that I assumed Yolanda to be his new love interest – you had me fooled! Finding out that Yolanda referenced a storm (a real storm) made it all more poignant. You have a beautiful writing style – it flows with emotion and genuineness. Loved this read, as...

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Alexis Araneta
14:23 Mar 03, 2024

Oh, Christy. Thank you so much ! It means so much coming from a writer I admire, such as you. Like I told John, writing about my country's deadliest storm immediately came to mind. I'm so happy that the way I wrote the juxtaposition of a light summer breeze and the cyclone that ended a life worked. And yes, the idea of making it seem like Aria was talking about a woman also came to me because yes, we actually do that. We rename storms that already have an accepted international name. I actually don't know why. Hahahaha ! As usual, I'm so...

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John Rutherford
12:40 Mar 03, 2024

I was in Manila once when a bad storm came through, on the east side, only days before I was visiting Palawan (El Nido area I think), or the islands off Palawan, but the typhon hit on the east side, so much damage, I have forgotten the name.

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Alexis Araneta
12:45 Mar 03, 2024

Ooh. Thing is we're always hit by typhoons, so much so that we make a local storm name list with names from A-Z a year in advance. Hahahaha !

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John Rutherford
12:13 Mar 03, 2024

A wonderful story, very poignant and sad, but believable. Thanks for sharing.

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Alexis Araneta
12:16 Mar 03, 2024

Yolanda is a real storm, the deadliest one in Philippine history, so when the theme came out, I knew that I had to make one about the typhoon. I'm happy you liked it (I think I still need to edit it, though). Thanks for reading !

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Mahalia Cahoy
16:38 Mar 09, 2024

Reminds me of when I was back in my hometown. This was very tragic, but also very well written, and very true. Loved the story!

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Alexis Araneta
16:40 Mar 09, 2024

Hi, fellow Filipino ! Yes, when I saw the prompts, writing about Yolanda definitely came to mind. I'm so happy it captured you.

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