Submitted to: Contest #294

Grief So Much Like Fear

Written in response to: "Write a story in which the first and last sentence are the same."

Contemporary Friendship

The words echo in my thoughts. Grief and fear.

I think about what C.S. Lewis once wrote, “No one ever told me that grief felt so like fear.”

I walk past her door. It is an obstinate reminder of the distance between us now. An impenetrable solid barrier. I place my hand against it, feeling the wood grain agitate my fingers. It tells me no.

“She’s sleeping.”

Trevor’s voice startles me, and I turn my head, my hand still pressed firmly against the door.

“I know.” I drop my hand, like a useless talisman dangling limply now by my side.

“She was asking for you earlier.”

I cringe, feeling the hair behind my head stand up.

Trevor leaves me staring at the hallway floor.

The grief that fills my chest, spreading like the cancer in Hannah’s body, makes me stagger under its pressure. I lean against the wall and look up, counting the ceiling tiles until I gain my balance again.

One… two… three… four…

I was so busy. No, you weren’t.

I didn’t think she would want me there. Yes. She did.

This isn’t about me. No, it is not, but I know in an instant that for Hannah, it is about me. Me and all her support team.

I feel my pulse quicken at the notion that, while I was willfully avoiding the pain of Hannah’s slow and labored decline, she was patiently waiting for my presence.

A burning rises in my gullet, and I press my stomach contents back into their place. My thighs quiver, and I slide down the wall, dropping my head between my knees. My breath comes in great, gasping gulps as I shudder under the anguish of my failure.

“Here.”

Trevor hands me a small, purple, cloth-covered journal. Dangling from its spine is a rhinestone angel, a gold thread attached to it.

“She wrote you something.”

Of course she did. A sudden wave of ice floods my limbs, tingling at the edges like pins and needles.

I flip the page to where the gold thread is placed.

"Dear Sarah."

I place the book face down on the floor next to me. Fear coils in my stomach, a snake ready to strike.

I’m such a coward.

Tears fill the hammock of my lower lids, cresting and rolling down my cheeks, flushed with emotion.

I can no longer tell if it is grief or fear.

Grief over losing my best friend, my number one girl, my sister from another mister. She always laughed at that one.

Fear over the depth of my callousness, my unkind selfishness during her time of need. Over the pain I caused.

Grief over the nature of life and this lesson in object impermanence.

Fear over my growing despondency to faith.

Grief. Fear. A whispered secret between concepts, finding harmony in shared meaning. Emotions, like rivers, sometimes merge into something greater than themselves.

"Dear Sarah," I start again. "I no longer have the strength or power to live."

I inhale sharply. Oh, Hannah. My face contracts inward. I drop my chin to my chest and consider the urge to throw the journal.

But I endure.

I hear Trevor banging around in the other room, his heavy footsteps pounding out a rhythm, a staccato to my heartbeat.

"I miss you, but I know how painful this is for you. And I want you to know, have no regrets. We abide in love."

My heart sinks low into my gut.

Impulsively, I straighten, push open the door, and lay myself down next to my friend. The cool, paper-thin skin of her shoulders sticks to my sweaty chest and neck. I am blistering with grief and rigid with fear, melting into the last visage of love, grasping tight to the end.

“Sarah?”

I open my eyes; the sting of my tears blurs my ability to see. I glimpse wisps of her fragile hair remnants, draped down along one brow. She faces the darkened ceiling, her eyes straining toward me, just out of sight.

She raises a gaunt hand blindly, veins extruding, knuckles gnarled and looming. I grab it gently and lower it to her duvet. We lay like this in silence, save for the rasping of her breath and my muffled whimpers.

“My boys.”

It’s a statement more than a question, but I know her intent.

“They’re in the other room.”

She sighs deeply, and my heart catches as I wait for her next breath.

There it is.

“Hannah, I am so sorry.” My voice cracks on the last word. “I am. I regret it so much. I don’t have an excuse; I am not worthy of this time with you.”

Stop making it about yourself. Stop being so needy.

I hear a quiet harumph from her, validation of my disappointment and accusations of myself. And even in this thought, I make it about me. Jesus.

“No,” she exhales. “You aren’t. I’m leaving. Leaving the party.”

She takes another breath.

“And I don’t expect everyone to stop for me.”

She blinks, so slowly, it holds me captive in a moment of stillness.

“I want to make an Irish goodbye.” At this, she attempts to smile, wryly.

I snicker nervously, the new emotion bumping up against my grief and fear. No room, I say, and expel it back to the recess of my emotional locker. I massage her frail hand gently. She sighs again.

“I love you, Hannah" I whisper, "and I will always have space in my life for your family.”

I watch her eyelids close, her face go slack, and her breathing deepen.

A tiny snore. She is asleep.

I feel my muscles soften, my life force rising to her ebbing essence. Like puzzle pieces clicking into place, they recognize each other and settle in. I let my emotions of grief and fear flow for both of us.

Truth often arrives in twos, each idea holding up a mirror to the other.

Finding common ground to coincide together. In peace.

The words echo in my thoughts. Grief and fear.

Posted Mar 14, 2025
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16 likes 6 comments

02:35 Apr 03, 2025

You captured me immediately to my feelings of my life's friendships, even with this author. Friendships run deep, coexist together, to be awakened even after being apart for many years , you can pick up right where you left off, to know what the other is thinking and just feeling content. Being there for each other's painful events, at a moments notice, no questions asked, no shame or guilt for the length of time between visits , to be there through their worst, to take the weight off their shoulders and just be. Beautiful, descriptive emotions visualized through your writing, you are very talented. I hope you post more short stories.

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Joseph Murray
21:21 Mar 26, 2025

Great story.
I enjoy how you portray how we focus on minute details of things when we are dealing with strong emotions.
Ultimately, it is only when we embrace the fear/grief and deal with the source that we begin to heal.
Very engaging story.

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Carolyn Monaco
16:16 Mar 25, 2025

Tears. Familiarity. Human.

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KC Foster
17:38 Mar 23, 2025

I do not like present tense writing, and I have never read one I liked, until now. I loved this! It's the first piece in that tense that I've loved and I felt so immersed in this man's pain and longing. It was so deep and reflective - almost poetic, and I love the use of CS Lewis quotes.

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Helen A Howard
10:14 Mar 23, 2025

I love your prose and style of writing. Grief and fear feel indistinguishable.

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14:18 Mar 22, 2025

Very sad- liked how the story uses tangible elements (the door, etc) to build the narrator's sense of exclusion, and physical details (nausea, appearance of the friend's hands/shoulders) to build an escalating sense of grief. By the very end, the narrator seems to have come to terms with the grief and fear they experience.

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