The first time you see him, you’re on your way to his funeral. Your black car, driven by someone you don’t know, follows the hearse, which is driven by someone else you don’t know. One thing you’ve found in the last few weeks is that there are a lot of new people to interact with in a time where you have never wanted anything more than to be left alone.
He is standing on the corner, on the last turn before the cemetery. He looks the way he did when you last saw him, when you had to identify his body. His limbs are at the wrong angle, barely supporting him, and his face… It’s distorted from the injuries but you can see the rage and accusation burning through. The sight of him cuts you and you remember your last view of his once perfect face, lying white on the silver table, surrounded by people with sympathetic faces and gentle questions.
You screech at the driver to stop and he stamps on the breaks, alarmed. Flinging yourself from the barely stationary car, you stumble to the space he was in. It’s empty. He’s gone.
There’s nobody else around either. But you know what you saw.
Something breaks in you then: something you didn’t know you had left to break. It feels like you’ve done a lot of breaking recently.
The driver that you don’t know approaches you cautiously and places a tentative hand on your shoulder. You let him guide you back to the car and finish driving you to your son’s funeral. It’s as horrible as you expected it to be and you can’t stop looking around for him.
***
The second time you see him, it’s twenty-four days after his funeral. You’re in the garden, escaping the silence of an empty house. The dark dirt is hard from a stretch of sunshine and it isn’t breaking under your hands. You can feel a blister forming between your thumb and forefinger and the heat is beating down on the tender skin at your neck. You give one more stab at the ground and then throw the tool away with a furious sound. Nothing is working for you. You can’t seem to do anything right. You lean over so that your forehead touches the earth and allow yourself a moment to not be okay.
When you look up, he’s there. He looks the way he did when he was five. His blonde hair ruffles in the faintest of breezes and he frowns at you. His little foot stomps in the way he used to stamp when he wasn’t getting his own way. You remember him doing it in supermarkets when he didn’t get a chocolate bar and you remember him doing it in church when he didn’t get picked to light a candle. Everything in you contracts.
As you watch, he looks at the trowel you launched. It has landed in the vegetable patch he spent so much time creating and you realise the force you put into the throw has broken one of the trellises. You remember how carefully he painted them, choosing the deep red himself despite your advice for a brighter shade. You know he is angry. You’re not surprised.
You look down, unable to face the look you know will be in his eyes. When you look up, he’s gone.
You are suddenly, abruptly, furious. How dare he do this to you? You’ve been living with his absence like an open wound and he can't even stay for a minute or two more? He must know, even in his childlike state, how hard this is for you. Five more minutes wouldn’t have been too difficult - you just want to see his face.
You snarl. It’s an animalistic sound that you don’t know you’re capable of making. Before you have fully understood what’s happening, you are standing in the wreckage of his hard work. Splinters of bamboo and shredded plant life are littered at your feet and your blackened fingernails are torn and bleeding. A drop of blood hits the ground, startlingly red against the green of the destroyed foliage. When you realise what you’ve done, you sink to your knees and howl.
***
The third time you see him is four months and one week after his funeral. You’ve been coerced into going to the farmer’s market with your sister, who thinks that you need to get out more. You have seen your reflection in the mirror and know that she is right. You pull the pale shawl around yourself tightly, though it is a warm morning, and follow dutifully.
You catch sight of him standing between a stall that sells honey and a stall that sells greeting cards. He looks the way he did at sixteen. His navy blue tie is on crooked and you remember reprimanding him for it; you fixed it for him and told him that it would help him make a good impression at his first ever interview. His hair is smartly styled and his face carefully blank. He stands, watching you and you drop the basket of fruit that you’d been persuaded to buy.
You’re moving through the throng before your sister can register the dropped produce. It’s crowded here and a couple passes between you, blocking your view of him even though you’ve sworn that you’ll not take your eyes off of him. When they pass by, he’s gone.
You whisper No under your breath and fix your eyes on the spot he was in. You don’t move. You’ll stand there until he comes back. You won’t move an inch, just as long as he comes back. You will stay there for hours, days, weeks just for him to please, please come back. You just want to see him. Just a glimpse. You’ll do anything.
Your sister arrives at your side and tries to speak to you. You don’t realise that you’ve been whispering deals and promises out loud until she asks you who you’re talking to. She’s worried and you want to reassure her but you’ve struck a bargain and you have to stick to it.
It’s a full hour before your sister’s panic overwhelms you and you allow her to lead you away. You want to reassure her but you can’t talk through the shards of glass in your throat.
***
The fourth time you see him, it’s six months and three days since his funeral. You’re in the kitchen, chopping onions for a meal you can’t be bothered to make. The colourless chemical released is making your eyes sting and you cross to the sink to splash some water in them.
He is standing in the doorway when you look up. He looks the way he did when he first left for university. He’s wearing a faded video game themed T-shirt and a look of tentative, teenage hope. He slouches against the door jam and you remember him standing like that just before you’d finished packing the car. You half hear his voice asking if you’re nearly ready, the same way he’d asked you all those years ago.
You stare, drinking in the pale contours of his face and the angle of his shoulders. The water and onion juice are stinging your eyes but you hold them open as long as you can. When you finally have to blink, you know, even before you look. He’s gone.
A sound escapes you, a low keening noise. It doesn’t compare to the sound of agony you’d made when you‘d first found out but it comes from the same source.
You sink to the floor. The tap is still running and the smell of onions is turning from sweet to bitter as they slowly char on the hob. But you stay where you are, empty and grey, missing part of your soul.
***
The last time you see him is eight months to the day after his funeral. You’re in the garden again, preparing to start painting. It’s the first time you’ve picked up your brushes since his death but there was something about the blush morning light on the tree tops that gave you the urge. It had taken an unexpectedly long time to find all of the things you needed and by the time you sit down, the light has changed. You still want to paint though so you look around for something else that is beautiful. Your attention is caught by the ruins of his vegetable patch, now overgrown with purple wildflowers and the new shoots of some stubborn green peas.
You know that he’s there before you turn. The sight of him is a familiar ache now; it’s like a phantom limb that needs to stretch. He looks the way he did the morning of the accident. His blue eyes are sparkling with the light of adventure and you remember warning him against going too fast on his new motorbike. His voice is faint on the breeze, teasing you for worrying too much, reminding you to lighten up a little. You remember the last words that you said to him and you say them again, holding his gaze.
It’s because I love you so much.
He smiles in the exact way he had done that morning and, for the first time in such a long time, you smile too. You feel a sense of calm and the grey wisp of cloud blocking the sun moves slightly. The light blinds you a little and you have to turn your head away for a second.
When you look back, he’s gone.
But it’s okay. There’s pain still but you can breathe through it; it doesn’t wind you the same way it used to. Your easel stands in front of you and there is so much beauty to be committed to canvas. You pick up your brush, breathe in the sweet-scented Spring air and begin.
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72 comments
You're so good at writing! Imagery is a clear picture, and the story flows at just the right pace. If you don't mind, could you check out my story and give some advice?
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Thank you! What kind of advice do you want? Are you looking for general points or detailed editing help?
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Hmm... detailed editing help? I would really appreciate feedback so that I can improve my writing. Thank you so much for answering, Laura!
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No problem! I’ll look at it now - feel free to check out some of my others while you wait!
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Okay! Again, thank you, Laura. :)
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Hey Laura! I read some of your writing as you asked and (without hesitation) here I am! This is beautifully done. I love the narration. It was very specific, and hits home for those of us who lost family. I also love the descriptiveness used when portraying the grief. Using things like the noises 'I' make, and the time after tge funeral to indicate the 5 stages. Well done!!
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Thank you so much! Thanks for taking the time to read and comment.
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Anytime!! :))
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Just read it again and I have two suggestions or observations (suggestervations?) to make, the second sort of relating to the title. In only a few brief glimpses you’ve managed to bring the character of the boy to life really well. The reader gets a strong sense of a young boy growing up, a heartbreaking image since we know he’s dead. So much so that when you mention he’s wearing a video game themed t-shirt, I immediately want to know what video game. It’s not important to the story, but adding that tiny detail would help with the immersi...
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This comment made me smile so much! Thank you for being so very detailed - it’s such a lovely comment to wake up to (especially as daughter dearest allowed me a generous broken five hours of sleep and I’m surviving on a cup of tea and some banana bread. Send help). I considered putting in the video game (I’d had it my head that he was of the Portal era so was considering a ‘the cake is a lie’ tee) but in my sci-fi, Sarah said that being overly specific in my examples pulled her out of the story. Maybe if I put in a less explicit gamer re...
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If you had gone for the Portal reference I’d have been thrilled – I used to have ‘The Cake is a Lie’ sweatshirt! It would have gone way over the heads of many though. In fact, good point about being overly specific. I think here your focus is the emotional stuff, and you don’t want to take away from that. I would proceed carefully with the edit because you don’t want to change to focus of the story. If you decide to add to it with extra layers, it would need to be done with a degree of silky, subtle skill. You’re good enough to get it righ...
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Haha! I’ve just done some colour edits - would you mind having a quick read through and letting me know if it’s a bit heavy handed? I’m still not convinced on the T-shirt either but I’ve changed it and I’ll sit on it for a while before I decide if I want to go more generic or not. Obviously no rush on the reread - you've already put way more time into this than you needed to! With passive - because you remove the subject, it’s a good one to use in mystery writing (the man was murdered gives away less than Joe murdered the man) and in pla...
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Also, I’ve just looked through all comments on here from you in the last day because I checked my phone during the 1am feed and I swear that I’d read a comment about you needing to pick your son up because he was in his second year doing some kind of legal thing. So... it appears that I’m now dreaming comments from you??? It shows how awake and aware I was at 1am, blearily shoving a bottle in the vague direction of my baby.
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Perfect! You’ve added in the color stuff in natural places, so its there for the perceptive reader to notice without taking away from the overall story. It enhances it really well. And you’ve even gone a step further, associating the colors with the different emotions. The red with anger seems an obvious choice now that it’s there, but I don’t think many people would have thought to put that in. I have zero artistic ability, but I can immediately see how the recurring colors match the tone. The blue tie and eyes, the green etc. all seem to m...
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That’s exactly what I was aiming for! Excellent, glad it’s worked. Thanks for the suggestion! You first story did indeed include dreams. And I love being your pet editor so it’s all worked out! If it makes you feel better about kids though, I have killed every single plant I’ve ever tried to care for. It turns out that if they screeched at me when they were hungry, I might’ve kept them alive longer.
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I love how you don't just stick with one moment but that you go ahead and speak about how he's being seen months after the funeral.
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Thanks!
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