16 comments

Drama Contemporary Sad

“I died a long time ago. It means nothing that I breathe, that I wake up every morn awaiting a day of housework, chores, and entertaining company. My life is endless toil, and I’d hardly call that living. It was easier when I was young. When I was bright and full of hope for my future that would surely never end in eternal grief. Before my spark went out, when I still had light behind my bright blue eyes and volume in my auburn hair. People could have easily confused me for someone happy, but not anymore. Now my skin is pale, my red locks thin and flat, my body so frail I feel as though my bones will break in the wind. Everyday I pray instead of waking I may just turn to dust. 


It's like the old songs say. You only miss the light when it’s dark out. You only mourn the sun on a cloudy day, but beg for the rain when the earth is dry. I learned that long ago, when I left a comfortable life that could have offered me education, adventure, and opportunity for a mediocre man and his stability. 


You see, I thought I was making the right choice when I married Luke. He was a Christian man, decently handsome, had a good family and a stable job. So when he proposed, I played my part and said yes. All my life I was told my wedding day would be the happiest day of my life, and I was preparing myself for it. In the end, it was okay. I remember the ginormous dress like it was yesterday. I hated the fit, and I despised the color. My mother-in-law did most of the wedding planning, and by the end of it I was dismayed and terrified for my wedding night. Thankfully, that was just as underwhelming.


My life since has been encompassed by a man with a big phony smile, deep frown lines, and dark eyes with darker circles underneath them. He isn’t happy, so neither am I. 


After the honeymoon (A week away in Italy. We had our first fight there. I loved the museums, he found them boring.) we moved to a nice two-story house in the suburbs. Luke began working in an exciting cubicle-central career that regularly evolves. Weekly meetings are his challenge, and professional handshakes are his best skill. His feeble mind is stimulated to the greatest extent. I did what any good 18-year-old wife would do. I stayed. I took care of the house, befriended the neighbors, and fell pregnant as soon as possible. 


I was only 19 when I gave birth to Blake. Now that’s something I remember. I nearly hemorrhaged during the birthing process, and afterwards vowed to never go through something so tortuous ever again. Once I saw the baby, my feelings towards the experience softened ever so slightly. Blake was so tiny, and he was all my doing. He was the only wonderful thing I ever did. He was beautiful right from the start, even though newborns are rather reminiscent of overripe radishes. Blake would cry and I would tend to him. He stimulated my mind, as I was the one to teach him how to be. Luke was around for the first two weeks, and then he went back to work, leaving me with a baby. 


I was happy taking care of Blake. That is, until he went off to school. The fun part was over, and I was left with nothing to do but manage a household and attend PTA meetings. Tiresome, laborious, dreadful work. 


I started to hate life, so I decided to befriend the other young wives travailing around me. Was their experience as bleak as mine? Not always. Some of them were in love, some enjoyed their children even more than I did. Still, so many felt the same way as I.


Every Sunday I would sit and chat with the other housewives of the block. Women with empty eyes and blemishless skin. They’re exhausted, but they’ll never move on. Just like me. After all, we have the kids to think of now. Kids we are giving our lives up for. Kids who didn’t ask to be here, and who’s fault is it that they are? Ours, of course. Well, mostly. So, we sit and talk and sip coffee and mourn silently.”


I set down the pen I'm using, as it's running out of ink. Writing this account of my days has grown bleaker and bleaker. Today I am attempting to recount the events that have led me to where I am now. I just can't stand another second of it. I look down at the page and notice it's spotted with tears. I wipe my cheeks, only just now realizing I have been crying. 


I stand from my seat at my desk and move the red cushioned chair aside. I walk in a pointless manner around the room my husband and I have shared for nearly thirty years now. I open the velvet curtains and take in the fading light of day. I make the bed once more, neater this time, and fold the laundry Luke has left on the ottoman. All of these are meaningless, futile tasks that I’ve been doing every day since the day I got here. I sigh, decide to leave the laundry on the ottoman and walk into our bathroom. 


Our, what a strange word to use. When have we once, in the entirety of our marriage, ever truly acted like we or our? 


Our, my, the communal bathroom is rather luxurious. It has a large vanity as well as the other typical accommodations. I’ve always found it curious that we call them vanities, considering you usually hate yourself after peering into it. I sit down on the white cushion stool and begin my daily routine. I use the bottles of creams and oils to look perfect and therefore twenty years younger. Perfumes and combs and lipsticks dot the countertop. As I get to work, I pause, and end up staring at the woman with empty eyes in the mirror. I think to myself, I don’t have to wear that perfume just because he likes it.


In an instant I stand up, decidedly done with getting ready for the day. How could I possibly handle all this noise in my mind? I nearly run back to my writing desk and pick up the pen, shaking it to release more ink. 


“I pace endlessly in the late hours of the evening, spiteful and grieving my own life. I am an insufferable, tiresome person. I have made my very own hell, paying for my past transgressions in this white-picket prison. The worst part is, if I had the chance to go back, I would give up the good life I gave to my child for my own happiness. I would exchange the sacrifices I made for Blake’s stability for my own freedom. I am a horrible, selfish person.”


I stand. Damn, that’s a confession. No one can ever find this, I must burn it. Which reminds me, I should light the fire. It’s getting cold out and Luke will want a warm home to return to tonight. 


Warm in temperature, not in company. Of course. 


I leave my room, walk down the dimly lit hallway and waltz down the rickety old stairs. The stairway is lined with pictures, as is the hallway it leads to. I pause to look at them. Blake’s high school graduation photos next to pictures of him in kindergarten. A photo of Luke the day he got promoted for the first time, and a picture of him with his mother on our fifteenth anniversary when we all went to Hawaii.


I realize how few of the pictures I am in. It feels as if the dismal fire inside of me clinging to life is only gasping out smoke. 


Oh right, the fire. I need to light the fire.


I continue down the hall and into the living room. A giant window that peers out into the neighborhood lines one wall, and on the opposite wall is the fireplace. I walk towards the window and see a young mother holding a toddler while walking a dog on the sidewalk. I watch as she sets the boy down, looking exhausted. I quickly pull the curtains closed. I take a breath and grab the matches from the coffee table next to the couch.


I start to try to light a match, but the first one hesitates respond and doesn't light. In frustration I grab a second one, which I manage to light. However, I was it fizzle out dismally in seconds. Finally, the third match I scrape against the box holds the flame just long enough for me to toss it into the fireplace. I gaze as it ignites the old wood. 


I find myself absolutely transfixed on the growing flames. I can't stop myself hoping, dreaming,and being more honest with myself than I’ve dared to be in years. If only I could go back in time and reignite my own spark…


I shake my head, banishing the rogue thought. Sounds nice, in theory. But I can’t go back. I can't leave. I can’t change. And so I wake every morning and breathe. I say my prayers and wait until the day my body catches up with my soul’s phase of rotting. 


I turn from the room in anguish and rush back up the stairs. Back to my desk. Back to my paper. Back to the pen.


I pick up the pen, not even pausing to shake it, and write once again. “I can’t-” I begin, before taking a moment to pause. I scan the page, and then flip backwards through the days of my life. Everywhere those five letters stand out. “I can't" “I can’t” “I can’t” over and over again.


Can I? 


I set the book down and stand. I walk down the old wooden stairs, and begin to pace. I wander around the empty house, past the pictures of Blake holding his Baylor acceptance letter, past the pictures of my husband playing football in college, past my wedding pictures from eons ago. I pass the window that has the perfect view of the neighborhood that holds women like shackles. I peek through the curtains. The toddler was now crying on the ground clutching his scraped knee, the mother holding him and crying as well. The fire cackles behind me. 


Can I?


I run back up to my (Our?) bedroom, the room that’s been the lonely zoo containing my body and mind for far too long. I grab my notebook, the journal my therapist suggested I write that I’ve been narrating my days to for months now, and add one last sentence to my collection of miserable entries. Underneath the paragraph about how selfish I am, just beneath my last miserable “I can’t”, I write, “And so, forevermore, she mourns the death of herself.”


Perhaps he won’t understand, but that's the point, isn’t it? It's my simple resignation letter to a cruel, uncaring world. However, the world I'm leaving is minute compared to the world I'm about to enter. I tuck the book underneath my silk pillow on the fresh-made bed and pull a plain black coat over my shoulders. I drop to the floor and search under the bed. I find the worn brown suitcase I packed twenty years ago, "Just in case." I strut down the wretched stairs and pass the dust-free picture frames in the hall. I nearly sprint to the heavy carved oak door. In desperation I grab at the polished gold door knob. For a moment, I pause, and consider what I'm about to do. I take a deep, slow breath. After a moment, my mind is made for good. I open the door and step outside.


I was free, and I vowed to never turn back again. 

April 04, 2023 21:09

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

16 comments

Lily Finch
18:35 Apr 24, 2023

Alexandra, this story made me think of 'when you get the chance move on and advance' your life is calling you. Living dead is a curse nobody should ever hope for. The style of writing matches the movement of the woman. Short and quickly. Nicely done. Great story. And so, forevermore, she mourns the death of herself.” - Great line. If I may suggest substitute constantly or continuously rather than forevermore. LF6

Reply

20:04 Apr 24, 2023

Thank you so much for commenting on my work! I really look up to you as an author and I feel so blessed to see you here. I'm so glad you appreciate the writing style! I always want my word choice and writing style to compliment my narrators and stories. Thank you for the compliment! I've gotten that feedback a few times now, I think I will! Thank you for your kind and helpful feedback :).

Reply

Lily Finch
22:54 Apr 24, 2023

It's not surprising! I thought this scene paralleled her life "I start to try to light a match, but the first one hesitates respond and doesn't light. In frustration I grab a second one, which I manage to light. However, I was it fizzle out dismally in seconds. Finally, the third match I scrape against the box holds the flame just long enough for me to toss it into the fireplace. I gaze as it ignites the old wood." Point to consider On the first line of the paragraph above maybe try, I unsuccessfully light a match, frustrated I grab anothe...

Reply

03:07 Apr 25, 2023

Reading this made me realize how many grammatical errors I had made while rushing to finish this, oh my. I'm sure that was annoying, thank you for your patience in seeing past it and reading anyway. I'm so happy you saw my intentional parallel there! I was hoping someone would. That paragraph sounds so much better, thank you. I am so blessed to be surrounded by talented, helpful, and king authors such as yourself.

Reply

Lily Finch
11:13 Apr 25, 2023

You are a good author too. LF6

Reply

16:23 Apr 25, 2023

Thank you <3

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Jody S
15:18 Apr 14, 2023

Beautifully written and the story drew me in. I like the use of short sentences and short paragraphs. That helped the story move and pull me in. I was so afraid (you built up the suspense well) that she was going to set the house on fire and stay in it). I was happy there was an uplifting ending. Good use of descriptions and lots of showing, not telling (silk pillow, fresh made bed, plain black coat etc.), which I like. The only word I didn't like (and maybe the use of it was intentional--kind of an Edgar Allen Poe homage) was "forevermore...

Reply

05:29 Apr 15, 2023

Thank you so much for the wonderful feedback! I really appreciate it. I'm glad you enjoyed the writing style I used, and that is captivated your interest. I was hoping to convey that feeling of suspense, that's very uplifting to hear! Thank you for the criticism as well, very helpful! I agree but cannot think of a different word either. I do happen to idolize Poe, he's probably rubbing off on me haha. I really appreciate it, thank you!!

Reply

Jody S
17:33 Apr 15, 2023

You did an amazing job with the suspense!! I definitely need to learn that skill! I love that Poe rubbed off on you! With that in mind, then, the word is perfect!! Sometimes I just need to marinate on things!! Keep up the wonderful writing!! Looking forward to seeing more of your works as I learn to navigate the site!!

Reply

04:48 Apr 17, 2023

Thank you very much! Your support is very appreciated and I'm really glad you enjoy my writing. I look forward to seeing your writing grow!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Richard E. Gower
09:53 Apr 14, 2023

A powerfully-written story that meets the prompt in a walk. I first thought she was moving toward ending her life, but the ending was uplifting. Well done.-:) RG

Reply

05:27 Apr 15, 2023

Thank you so much for the kind words! I wanted to build up such a suspense and take the reader in another direction, so I'm very glad that was portrayed!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Rudy Greene
21:04 Apr 13, 2023

Wow! What a well written soulful story. I loved the short sentences and paragraphs. Her ability to draw us into her emotional life and feel the drudgery of her existence was exceptional. Her voice, tone and descriptions made feel her pain and boredom. It had me hoping that the story did not end with suicide. Well done. I hope the story was fiction but it felt very real.

Reply

04:14 Apr 14, 2023

Thank you so much, you're so sweet! I'm really glad you liked the writing style, I second guessed myself while working on it but I'm glad it got my point across eloquently. I really appreciate the kind words. It is, but I'm glad it felt so real!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Mary Bendickson
17:34 Apr 11, 2023

A woman's work is never done. Run, girl, run!

Reply

05:17 Apr 12, 2023

She felt the same, and the part of me I made her out of also agrees. Thankfully she did!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Reedsy | Default — Editors with Marker | 2024-05

Bring your publishing dreams to life

The world's best editors, designers, and marketers are on Reedsy. Come meet them.