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Closer To The Sun (standard:romance, 8046 words) | |||
Author: 525 | Added: Sep 22 2000 | Views/Reads: 4304/2545 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A young man experiances and learns about love and death. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story (actually I think it was from fireplace ashes or a burnt briquette he found in a barbecue or something) all around his eyes. He had a chocolate ice cream cone in his hand and all over his mouth, and he was screaming as loud as I had ever heard anyone scream. Something about how he needed more dirt and there was not enough dirt in his back yard or something. He stopped right in front of my face and was silent for a second, like he was trying to work out the fact that he had never seen me before, then outta nowhere he screamed "DIIIIIRRRRRRRRTTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!" and I almost fell on my ass. Then, as fast as he ran in, he ran off in the other direction. At that point a girl ran around the corner and ran off in the same direction he had. She didn't stop or do any screaming, but she did look at me for a few seconds. Now, I had had a couple of girl friends but it was mostly schoolyard hair pulling stuff. I didn't really buy the version of love that the movies seem to push, and I definitely didn't believe in love at first sight, but the first time my eyes met Katy’s, something happened. I'm not saying that I fell in love, but I think at that point I changed; I understood how someone could fall in love at first sight. I ran after them to see what was going on. When I caught up to them, she had apparently caught him and wrestled him to the ground. He was still struggling. The ice cream cone had disappeared at some point, but the dirt on the ground was mixing nicely with the mess he already had on his face. Once she had him pretty well subdued, she told me, "It's just time to take his medication - which he hates doing". She said he was "slow," but I assumed she meant that he was retarded because physically he looked fast as hell - like a top that had been spun as fast as possible and let loose in a small box. Then she gave me a smile that was innocent and cunning at the same time and took off. 4 I asked Grandma about them, and she told me their names and told me that they lived down the street a bit. She said that Jessie was my age and that Katy was a few years older. According to some kind of neighborhood old-lady-gossip communication system, Jessie's "slowness" was apparently due to a childhood accident Grandma blamed on his father. She also said Katy was a "little trouble maker," and she recommended I stay away from the whole family. Of course my reaction was an immediate desire to go and get to know them - especially Katy. The next chance I got, I took a walk down the street. I didn't know exactly where they lived but I was just walking and thinking about how happy I was to be out of the house of death and away from my mom and grandmother. I was brought back to reality by the sound of digging. I peeked over a fence and saw Jessie in his back yard trying to get a shovel to move dirt from one place to another and not having much success. He didn't quite have the coordination, but somehow he had achieved pretty much total destruction of the yard. There were holes everywhere and piles of dirt all over. Sometimes he would try and get on top of a pile but it would be too loose and he would just knock a bunch of dirt back into one of the holes. I didn't realize I had been leaning on the gate and when I put a bit too much weight on it I fell through. He looked over and once he realized what was going on he started running straight at me. I scrambled to get up, afraid of another screaming incident or God knows what else, but he showed more of his exceptional speed and was on me before I could get up. I cringed, preparing myself for the worst, but he just grabbed my arm and pulled me over to his latest attempt at a dirt pile. He kept saying, "Hi" and, "I'm Jessie," and he held his fingers that way that retarded people have of holding them. I think there was some drool on those fingers too so I was just hoping I wasn't getting very much of it on me. He handed me the shovel and asked me to help him dig. I didn't really see the point, and it was pretty hot so I tried to change the subject. I asked him, "Where's Katy?" He said, "Kathryn is my sister, I don't know where Kathryn is." Then he asked if I wanted to dig, just to make sure I hadn't changed my mind in the last five seconds before he went back to it. I sat there and watched for a while. Like I said before, he wasn't proficient. He couldn't quite handle the shovel and there wasn't really enough organization to accomplish anything. He was very determined though, and every now and then he would realize I was there and check with me again about whether I wanted to help or not. I would say, “No,” and he would go back to focusing on the job at hand. Apparently he was trying to make a huge pile of dirt but he had several piles and several holes, and even though he was very focused on the job, he couldn't stay focused on any particular pile, and most of the time most of the dirt he was throwing around just ended up sliding back into one of the many holes. I guess it didn't matter. To me it just looked like a mindless time killer anyway. I heard a car pull up out front and looked over my shoulder to see what was going on. Katy got out of the passenger side and, since she wasn't chasing her brother down and couldn't see me watching her, I got my first really good look at her. I started to understand every cliche, sappy, boy-meets-girl description that I had ever heard, read, or seen in the movies. I was moved. I could actually feel that my knees were physically weak, and I couldn't believe it. Even at the time the thought made me laugh a little. I'm not sure if she was a classic beauty or even if one other person would find her beautiful but, of course, that didn't matter. She was so beautiful to me. Watching her was like going from one extreme to another. Like if you hear some loud music, it's cool but not nearly as impressive as when a song gets you sucked in, gets kind of quiet, then suddenly hammers you with the increase in volume. I had been sucked in by the boring world, it got kind of ugly, then suddenly I had been hammered by beauty. This classic, time-stands-still moment was broken when she slammed the car door, leaned over and started screaming at its driver in the most violent manner I had ever seen. I think fire actually came out of her mouth. My lovely vision had been transformed into something like a diner waitress doing some final straw vocal violence at the fry cook, at the end of a never-ending shift on her worst day of serving the dregs of society. The driver showed her his middle finger; then the car screeched off. She stood up, composed herself, and walked toward the house. This scene had definitely pulled me out of my lovey- dovey dream state, but, surprisingly enough, I think it made me like her even more, which I hadn’t thought was possible. Then Jessie's mom (I guessed) came out on the back porch and started calling him. She was big and had one of those faces that not only doesn't look feminine anymore but barely looks human. I don't know how Katy sprung from this apparent lack of fertility. She was wearing an apron that had many nice stains on it, but I think blood made up most of the artistry on this canvas. If she would have had an oversized cleaver in her hand (and I'm sure that cleaver was hanging on a nail in her kitchen somewhere) she could have just stepped out of some over dramatic, Italian opera about a butcher. Jessie ran to her side where she hugged him to her bosom. On his way he kept saying, "Hi mama, hi Mama." She stroked his hair and said, "Who's that?" I imagined that cleaver being jabbed in my direction to indicate she was asking about me, and I got a bit scared that I might have gotten myself in trouble. I can be oblivious to things sometimes, and I suddenly realized that I was basically trespassing here (at least as far as she knew). Jessie said, "That's my friend, he doesn't like to dig, but I still like him". I was a bit taken aback, I didn't really know Jessie, but I felt that he my have saved me from the wrath of Kong by saying that we were friends. I liked him too. She scowled at me and grunted (the cleaver returned to a resting position at her side) and said, "Well run along then, Jessie has to come in for supper". I contemplated responding but nothing came to mind. So I just stood there for another second with my hands as deep in my pockets as they would go and my shoulders as close to my ears as they would go, then ran off toward the gate. When I got to the street I heard something, so I stopped running to listen. It was screaming, it was coming from Jessie’s house, and it wasn't Katy. I listened a bit closer and I thought I also heard crying. I buried my hands in my pockets again and headed to Grandma's. 5 The next morning I woke up very early. I was disoriented. I looked around the room and the predawn light didn't show me anything unusual. The room was undisturbed; my sister was sleeping calmly on her bed in the room we shared. Then my ears found the reason: I heard my grandmother coughing. Not just coughing, but this raspy, deep, chronic-sounding coughing, it didn't sound like it was ever going to stop. As I heard her struggling to intake air just to fuel the cough, I realized she was dying. I've said I can be oblivious but I guess I'm a bit self absorbed too. I was worried about leaving my friends for a summer and pissed about having to deal with the boredom of hanging out in Lakeside, but she was dying. This house would be empty. She had walked these rooms and halls forever but that would suddenly stop. My life would go on and in six months she would be unknown, but now she was dying. She would no longer exist. I had to stop thinking about it before it got to a point where I couldn't stop; shortly thereafter I was sure I would go insane. I couldn't imagine my life ending. Then nothing. She was dying. I put my pillow over my head and tried to think about something else, Katy had occupied my brain most of the time lately, but for some reason I thought of Jessie. I wondered if he knew about death and if so what his thoughts might be. After a while I took the pillow off of my head and the coughing had stopped but I could hear the delicate whimpering that I knew was my sister Anne's crying. 6 Later that morning at the breakfast table, I asked mom about Grandma (normally she was here with us). She told me not to worry; then we were silent. After a while I told her that I had gone to Jessie’s and about the backyard demolition/attempted construction. She didn't say much (she rarely did) but she did seem to think it would be a nice thing to befriend Jessie. Maybe she was sacrificing her only son to charity, or maybe she knew about the death house and she was sacrificing herself to save me. I don't know. She did say, "Be careful. You heard what Grandma said about them," but I doubted that she put any more weight behind the Grandma gossip network than I did. So I finished breakfast and headed over to Jessie's. 7 I wasn't quite sure what I would do when I got to Jessie's, but I guessed I would figure it out. This time I was distracted by being able to see Jessie. I walked up to the gate and looked over. Jessie was standing on one of his soft dirt hills (it was maybe five feet high, maybe only four) and he was buried to about mid shin, which is where he had apparently stopped sinking. He was wearing nothing but a pair of boxer shorts and his arms were stretched out with his palms up. His head was leaned back and his eyes were closed. His mouth was open and his tongue kind of lolled out of the right corner of his mouth. The sun beat down on him. I was amazed - amazed to see him so still but also to see him standing there with his vulnerable mortal shell exposed to the harshness of the universe. What was he doing? What was he thinking? I didn't want to wake him from his self-induced coma but I didn't know what to do. I finally decided to go up to the door. Maybe his mom would announce me and that would bring him back. It was worth facing Kong, there was no way I was going to yell or touch Jessie to wake him up. For some reason I was afraid he was dead. I know it was impossible to die and stay in that position, but my fear was real. I could imagine walking up to him slowly and reaching my hand out to touch him and giving him a little shake. I could imagine feeling his skin was cold the second before his body crumbled to the ground in a lifeless ball, like some crumpled up scrap of paper that missed the trash can and was just sitting there on the floor, inanimate. I thought that this morning’s pre-dawn philosophizing about death had fucked me up. I had stopped it before going insane, but obviously it had done some damage. I realized I needed to stop it again so I started walking to the front door. I opened the screen and was about to knock when the door slammed open (if such a thing is possible) and Katy grabbed me by the wrist and whispered, "How deep is your voice?" I wrinkled my eyes and said, "Huh?" "That's good enough" she said and smiled. Next thing I knew I was being dragged down a hall and up some stairs and into a room. She picked up a phone receiver and held her hand over the mouthpiece then put the whole package, hands, phone and all between her knees. She was hunched over and looking up at me and said (in that same conspiratorial whisper), "All you have to do is say, ‘Hello.’" I wrinkled my eyes again but there was a phone mouthpiece in my face before I could say anything. She was looking at me and smiling and nodding so I said, "Uh.......... Hello?" She put her hand over her mouth to hide the laughter and the phone to her ear to hear the response. She was still nodding at me. Shortly thereafter she moved the phone a bit farther from her ear and laughed harder. I could see why she didn't need it that close to her ear; I could hear the man on the other end from about five feet away. It wasn't clear but I'm pretty sure I heard, "I WILL KILL HIM!" Then I heard the click of the phone being hung up. Then she started laughing loud and hard. She kind of slumped down to the floor holding her stomach, lay on her side and brought her knees up to the fetal position. I could not help smiling. Eventually she was released from the clutches of hilarity and seemed to realize for the first time that I was standing there and would have to be dealt with even after she was really through with me. She said "Hi" and lit a cigarette. I think I managed a "Wha......" and she said, "Oh yeah, that was my boyfriend. I was just fucking with him". She leaned out the window to try and keep the smoke from coming in the room but it wasn’t really working. I looked out the window and saw Jessie, still in his Jesus Christ pose. I took that opportunity to try and kill two birds with one stone, say something intelligible and get an answer about Jessie. "What is he doing out there?" "Oh I don't know, he's just stupid" she said, then she screamed at him "JESSSSIEEEEE!!!!!!!! KNOCK IT OFF!!!!!!!!" I cringed, waiting to see his body fall lifelessly to the ground. But he just kind of woke up and put his arms to his sides and sulked off. "So you're a friend of Jessie's, huh?" she asked. That concept had helped me the other day and sounded nice this morning, but I didn't want to say it to Katy for some reason. "Not really. We just met the other day, ya know." "Oh yeah, now I remember you." I started to say something, but she cut me off and said, "I should call my boyfriend and calm him down, he's stewed long enough". I stood there for a second then realized she was shooing me out of there with her facial expression. So I thought I would go and try to find Jessie. I went through the kitchen looking for the back door. I didn't see the cleaver hanging anywhere. Perhaps I was wrong (It must have been in a drawer somewhere). I walked out the back door and didn't see him right away, but as I started to look around the mounds of dirt and look in the holes, I saw him curled up in a corner of the yard that wasn't mounds or dirt (it was a very small corner). He looked very much like the lifeless ball I had imagined earlier but I forced myself to go over to him. When I got there he looked up and said, "Hi, I'm Jessie." I was thankful that he spoke first and that I didn't have to try to wake him up. I sat down next to him and didn't really know what to say. Suddenly as if beyond my control, I said, "Why did you tell your mom that I was your friend yesterday?" "Because you are my friend, right?" "Yeah... sure.... I guess Jessie, but we hardly know each other. How can we be friends?" "Uhhhh you were here and I was here and it was a long time, I liked it and you helped me dig, you are a good friend," he said. "I didn't help you dig." I reminded him. "Uuuu huh huh huh huh huh, oh yeah," he laughed, "but you will. That's what friends are for, and we are friends." I shook my head. "Well, I'll be your friend, but I doubt I will ever help you dig". He laughed again and I smiled at him, or with him I don't know, and he didn't care. Then just as suddenly as the first question came to me I said, "Why do you dig Jessie? Are you looking for something?" He stopped laughing and smiling, and got very serious. I don't think I had ever seen him serious, it made him look very normal to me and when he spoke he sounded very normal. "I want to make a big dirt hill and stand on it. I'll be closer to the sun"................... "I need to be closer to the sun" ............. Did he actually mean that he wanted....... needed to be physically closer to the sun? What did he want so badly? Why would someone work so hard just to get another three or four feet closer to the sun? That was it; his explanation was over; his seriousness didn't change. Now I didn't need the mysterious presence to send any more questions to my brain. I was flooded with my own. I was about to start with, “What do you mean?”, and with his newfound seriousness I even expected an intelligent answer and maybe even a debate. For some reason I had the feeling we were going to be able to talk about (maybe not solve but at least discuss) the weird feelings I had been having lately. But before I could get my question out, I heard Katy yelling at me from her upstairs window. “HEY......... YOU............. DUDE............" She laughed. "I DON'T KNOW YOUR NAME" More laughter. "WILL YOU COME UP HERE FOR A SECOND? I NEED A FAVOR." I didn't say anything. I looked at Jessie and he still looked the same. I looked back at the window and she was still leaning out. She smiled. I got up and started running towards the back door. It took about half a second to realize how dorky that looked so I slowed down. The damage had probably already been done, though, unless I had gotten lucky and she had gone back inside. I looked up and saw I had no such luck. She was not only still there but she was laughing, not viciously or anything but still laughing. I smiled and I'm sure it looked very uncomfortable. When I got to her room, my jaw fell to the floor. She was standing there in nothing but a small pair of shorts and a bra. She was looking at her profile in the full-length mirror and kind of pulling her shorts down a bit and lightly stroking her belly. I was mesmerized. She nonchalantly asked, "do I look pregnant?" My jaw found a way to drop further. "Aaaaaaa.........uuuuhhhhhhhh" was about all I could manage and I was pretty impressed I got that out. I swallowed hard. Could she know what this was doing to me? I mean of course she knew. This is the kind of thing girls do intentionally just to make guys nuts, but how could she know? I wasn't sure of all the emotions I was feeling, but she must have seen something in my face because she put her shirt back on, which wasn't really the reaction I was hoping for. But it did make communication a lot easier. "Do you really think you’re pregnant?" I asked. "I know I am. I have a feeling, and I missed two periods," she said. "Who's the father?" "My boyfriend." I assumed that was the guy with the muscle car, the finger, and the winning phone personality. "Oh, and by the way, you're my boyfriend now." My jaw dropped again, and my speech went back to babble. "Umm...... wha??????" "Yeah, that's right. I told my boyfriend that I had a guy over here and he was my new boy friend." My heart sank to my knees. I decided I definitely believed in love at third sight. Again I had a million questions but was cut short. She looked up and said, "SSSSSHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" "That's my mom and dad's car! They're home and I'm not allowed to have boys in my room. I could get in a lot of trouble." For the first time I saw something other than playfulness in her face; I saw real fear. "You have to go out the window!" "WHAT! Are you crazy? I could get seriously hurt." "Please..... please. I need your help!" FUCK! How could I resist the girl of my dreams playing the damsel in distress? I climbed out on the overhang just under her window, hung from it and aimed for the nearest pile of dirt and dropped. I think I twisted my ankle pretty good, but for the most part I was ok. I started to hear yelling in the house again so I hobbled off toward my grandmother’s house. 8 My mom leaned her head in my room the next morning and said, "Your grandmother wants to talk to you." As I wiped the sleep from my face, I looked at her. She looked at me and shrugged. I thought this was unprecedented and probably should have scared the shit out of me, but I'm especially stupid in the morning and didn't even really realize what was going on until I was walking through her door. I kneeled/sat down by her bed while I continued to wake up. It was a slow process. She took a deep breath and started saying what she needed to say. “I know we don't talk much, and I'm sorry to be dropping this deep a subject on you in what must be a weird time for you. But it breaks my heart to see the way your mother's life has turned out and I never had the guts to tell her this. So in a weak attempt to make up for the mistake I made by being too afraid to talk to your mom about hard subjects, I am going to talk to you. “In six months you will have forgotten about me, and that's ok, and that's how it should be, but please don't forget this: love is all that matters. My body is leaving this world now but my heart left it with your grandfather six years ago. I was sad then, but I'm not sad now. I hope I am going to meet him, but no one can really say that for sure. The important thing is that I loved the time we had together. We lived the time we had together, and that means more to me than life or death or anything. It wouldn't have mattered if that time was a minute or a lifetime, if I would have missed it, or made the mistake of recognizing it but not seizing it, or if I would have been too scared to hang on to that time, my life would have been very incomplete. As it was I felt like my life could not have been fuller. I was sad when Grandpa died, but I was content, as I myself am content to die now. I...... we lived. We truly loved each other, and because of that we were able to love life regardless of any other circumstances. We were probably lucky and maybe it is something that is hard to find. I hope you have listened and that if you are lucky enough to find it in your life, you will remember how important it is and never let anything stand between you and love." She smiled and looked at me. She was done. Even though she looked sort of dead I didn't go into my descending spiral of death obsession, she blinked a couple of times and closed her eyes, still smiling. I sat there for a while. It should have been a shocking conversation, but I wasn't shocked. Here was a woman I barely knew. She was family, which is different. She was not a stranger, but still, I had seen her maybe once or twice a year at best, and even that had lessened in the latest years. She was right: we never really had talked much, and if she had said these things before I left Seattle I probably would have just thought she was crazy and gone back to hanging out. But in light of recent events and how messed up my brain had been, the things she said sounded like they were coming from the mouth of a close friend that I had been informing about my life and feelings on a daily basis. She knew. Somehow she knew. She knew and I still wasn't shocked I just loved her. Not exactly like the life-making love she talked about, but enough to give me a taste of what that love might be like - a taste of what it might be like to have someone in your personal universe forever. You might say I became a man at that moment. I would definitely say I had done a lot of growing up in the last few minutes, but I wouldn't say I had become a man, yet. I knew what I had to do, but just knowing it doesn't make you a man. Doing it does. I know this now, and I owe it to my Grandmother. I loved her. I needed to talk to Katy. 9 I rushed through my breakfast (I would have skipped it if my mom hadn't collared me as I was heading out the door). When I got to the door at Jessie’s house, I heard more of the same yelling. I guess it was constant when their parents were home. The thought of turning away or doing something other than knocking on that door never occurred to me. I assumed it was her dad that answered and asked, "WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU?” He was wearing a wife beater and it had stains, like his wife’s apron had stains, but they were different. They were spreading stains, brown to tan, originating at his armpits and not stopping until they ran into each other. There were also some food droppage stains on the gut area (as opposed to the food preparation stains that were on Kong’s apron). He smelled like a big chunk of really bad cheese (not bad as in gone bad but one of those cheeses that smells bad even when it's new) dropped into a bucket of battery acid. "WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU!" he asked again. I looked through the door and could see Katy Jessie and their mom all in the living room. Katy had a blanket wrapped around her and I could see blood and bruises on her face. She wasn't crying, she looked sad and disgusted. "WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU!!!!!!!!!!!" Her dad said apparently for the last time because his throat sounded pretty screamed out. "My I please speak to Katy?" I asked. "CAN'T YOU SEE WE'RE HAVING A FAMILY CRISIS HERE?" "I'm her friend, please, ask Jessie, I need to talk to her." "OH A FRIEND HUH? THEN YOU MUST KNOW DENNIS!" I wasn't sure but I had a pretty good idea of who Dennis was. "HE'S THE ONE THAT BEAT HER UP AND I WOULD LIKE TO HAVE A LITTLE TALK WITH HIM, SO IF YOU KNOW WHERE HE IS, YOU BETTER TELL ME NOW, BOY!" "LET IT GO DAD!" Katy screamed. Now she was crying. Her dad turned around and closed the door while telling Katy, "WHEN I FIND HIM I WILL KILL HIM!" The screaming was still going on in the house. I stood there for a second but I didn't really have any hope of talking to Katy. I would figure out a way as soon as I could. 10 I went back to their house the next day and it was empty. I looked in the back yard........ nothing, no cars in the driveway, no lights in the windows. The next day was the same, deserted. I was scared I would never get to talk to Katy, to tell her how I felt. I had missed my chance, just like Grandma said. FUCK! I didn't know what to do, so every day I would walk around aimlessly, which would take me by her house three or four times. I never saw any changes. I was getting very depressed. On the third day of this routine I walked close enough to Grandma's house to see an ambulance driving off without the lights on. I ran as fast as I could. When I got to the doorway I could see down the hall into the kitchen. Mom was sitting at the table, I think she was crying. By the time I got close enough to tell she had stopped and there was no evidence that she had been. "Grandma died,” she said. "I know, I saw." She asked if I was ok. I was, If Grandma had been happy with her life and content to die now, I didn't see much reason to feel bad. "I think I'll miss her,” I said. She nodded, ruffled my hair and tried to smile. "It should only take a couple of days to get things in order. Looks like you will still get to have some of your summer vacation." Now I realized what this meant. Now I had a lot of bad feelings like fear, pain, urgency. I could feel the most important thing in my life slipping through my hands, like playing tug o’ war with Conan. There was nothing I could do. I had no control over any aspect of the most important thing in my life. That was the worst part. I went outside and kicked rocks out of the ground in the front yard, my hands buried in my pockets. 11 The next day I continued my routine of rambling around the neighborhood. I didn't know what else to do. When I got within sight of their house, I couldn't see any changes, but as I got closer I swore I could hear digging. I started running. As I ran past the gate I heard Jessie yell, "HI, WANNA HELP DIG?" I ignored it and went straight to the door. I knocked and then stood there forever. I was about to go ask Jessie what was up when Katy opened the door. She didn't look as bad as she had when I saw her on the couch a few days ago but she looked bad enough. She still had visible bruises, a huge scab under her right eye, and I think I detected a limp. I wanted to take her face in my hands and promise to protect her for the rest of her life. She was different, but not, somehow. Maybe she had had the "little trouble maker" beaten out of her but she still had a spark in her eye. I doubted that anything could remove that spark as long as she was alive. That was the Katy I loved. She said "Hi" and walked out to sit on the porch steps. I said "Hi" and sat next to her. I wasn't nearly as tongue-tied as I had been before, I was quite calm but I wanted to start off slow. "I guess the last few days have been pretty weird for you, huh?" "Yeah," she said, "but my whole life’s been pretty weird". I was about to dive in headfirst even though I had no idea what I was going to say. I was just going to tell her the truth - that I loved her - and see what happened. But before I had a chance she said, "Remember how I said you were my boy friend now?" "Yeah." "I guess it's really true now, I'm not going out with Dennis any more." She giggled. "I'm just teasing you. You sure seem really nice though. I would like to get to know you better." I could feel my heart smile. "If you're not going out with Dennis anymore what will happen with the baby?" "Oh, daddy made me get an abortion," she said rather nonchalantly. I got the impression she didn't think it was any big deal, that she didn't understand what that really meant. I'm not religious and I've never really strong opinion about either side of the abortion issue. I really hadn’t given it that much thought. But I had given a lot of thought to the preciousness of life lately and how easy it was to throw it all away. So my reply was natural. It was a reflex, and it was regretted as soon as the last moment of sound exited my mouth. "You killed your baby?" She looked at me with her natural smile still existing on her face for a second like she was just going to continue with a normal conversation. She said, "I....." and then a few unintelligible syllables. It started to look like she was a long way away. "Katy, I'm sorry, that's not what I meant." "I guess I didn't really think about it. That was my baby," she said, slipping further away. "Could you go now? I want to be alone." Her face still looked blank but tears were now finding their way down her cheeks. She moved like a crying zombie. She kind of backed and felt her way through the door and closed it slowly. Again I felt control slipping away, I wanted to bang on the door until it broke but I didn't see how I could do anything even if I had been standing right next to her. Again I couldn't think of anything to do other than walk. I had been walking for a while hoping that after some time (not much time, we didn't have much) went by, we could get together and talk about everything some more. Then I heard something behind me. I turned around just in time to keep from getting knocked over by Jessie. His momentum carried him five or ten feet past me. When he righted himself and came back to me, he was too out of breath to say anything, but his eyes were screaming. "Kathryn - -," breath, breath, " - you friend - -," breath, breath, breath - "HELP!" - breath. He started pulling me back in the direction he had come from, but I didn't need much persuasion. We were both running at top speed within about five feet. We ran up the porch stairs; he burst through the door. Jessie's left arm looked like it was involuntarily contracting to his chest, and then he started hunching over, his limbs being pulled into the fetal position by a magnet in his chest. The only exception was his right arm, hand, and finger. They were pointing up the stairs. "HHHHEEEEEEELLLLLLPPPPPP!!!!!!!!!!" he screamed before he collapsed to the floor. I ran up the stairs in a panic. I ran to Katy's room and looked around quickly, not seeing anything. The corner of my eye caught something; my attention was drawn because it didn't look right. I turned my head slowly and looked down the hall. Through the bathroom door I could see a little bit of the end of the bathtub and even less of the water inside it. That's what wasn't right. The water was red. I started walking down the hall, I couldn't run anymore. As I inched closer I could see more and more of the bathroom, the bathtub, the water. I peered through the doorway and saw what I knew I would see. Katy, lying in a bathtub full of her own blood. Her head was on the edge of the tub facing me. Her eyes were open. The blood wasn't the only thing she had drained into the water; her life was gone too. The spark in her eye was gone. Our life was gone. She took it from us. "NNNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" I ran to her and put her head in my hands. It was still warm. I still loved her. "NNNNNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !" The world started to go gray just as I felt a hand on my shoulder thr owing me across the bathroom to the floor. "NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I looked up and saw what lo oked like firemen, I saw Katy's lifeless body being carried away, and I saw Katy's parents fighting. Everything went black. Epilog I went to the funeral to say goodbye to Katy. I didn't really know anyone in her family other than Jessie so I kept my distance. I felt like some kind of ghoul lurking amongst the headstones. I was close enough to see their bodies wearing black and their faces dressed in sorrow. I wondered if Jessie really knew what was going on, he seemed to have some idea. Either that or he was heavily sedated. Then I swore I could see a tear come from his eye. Suddenly everything seemed more real to me; you know how when things get weird in your life but since it's different it seems like a movie or something and it doesn't really sink in? It's easy to say that it was just some unusual circumstances and it's over, whatever. That time was over for me, I realized that I had come down here, fallen in love, and contributed to the death of the woman I loved. I would live the rest of my life knowing it was incomplete. This was no movie and I would be changed forever. I cried. I didn't cry often. It wasn't like in the movies where actors can just turn on the waterworks and tears stream from their eyes. It was like fighting, I could feel my eyes were full of tears, it hurt, it burned. I leaned my head back, facing the sky. I squeezed my eyes shut to force the tears out. They left hot little trails from the corner of my eyes to my temples and into my hair. Like little rivers of lava crawling down the side of a volcano. Then it was over, the liquid part anyway; I didn't feel any better. I'd heard people talk about how it helped to express you emotions, but I didn't feel any better. I didn't see how I would ever feel any better. All I knew was that Katy was gone, and I knew I would never cry again. 2 After the funeral I found myself walking again. The way I felt reminded me of something Grandma had said during our talk. I was content to die. But obviously that feeling originated in two different places for us. She was content because she had lived and loved; I was sure love was lost. I heard the sound of digging and looked up to see that I was in front of Jessie's house. I peeked over the gate and saw Jessie hard at work still in his funeral slacks, shirt, and tie - and still not making much progress. I walked through the gate and sat down on the nearest pile of dirt. After a few shovels full of dirt had found their way up the dirt mound (and then mostly back down in the hole), he looked up at me from under his eyebrows, his sweaty hair in his face, and said, "Kathryn is gone". "I know,” I said. This time I was sure I saw a tear run down his cheek. He said, "Kathryn is closer to the sun". I stood up, gently took the shovel from him, and started digging. ********** Thanks to Kirdas (another writer featured on this site) for all his help with the things spell check doesn’t’ catch. This story would look a lot different (and I don’t mean better) with out him.********** Tweet
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