CATEGORY: Fiction


Busy Hours


 


The first morning after separation.  You open your eyes and you let a moan part from your chest.  On the sheets, there’s a big stain of sweat; the pores on your skin are black, the whole of your body tastes salt. 


 


Shower.  Water running down your face.   It gathers at the sharp tip of your chin, follows its trail down the neck, the chest, gets down, down, fills the crevice of your skin, swerves and meanders through every single cleft you did not know it existed.  You hesitate to stretch your arm and close the tap, not because the water is warm, but because you are thinking of what to do next, trying to remember what actually is next. 


 


The kitchen.  You taste the coffee, and it’s bitter and cold.  You rise from the table and you fetch the match box.  As you try to open, it falls down and the few matches disperse on the ground.  You can do without them, you know you can do.  You look for the sugar can on the wooden shelf, but it is not there.  You look again and again, inside the cupboard, around the sink and you grow certain someone has messed up with your things in your absence.  You go back to the table, and catch sight of small can an inch or two from your cup, exactly where you had left it two weeks ago, before you had left.  You add the usual two spoons in the coffee, and sit motionless like you were waiting for it to cool, except it is already cold. 


 


Voices of laughter outside.  The schoolchildren whose voices you missed during two weeks.  The voices grow boisterous, and you know that they are there, below you window, breaking through your fence, tearing out the jonquils and the roses.  They may not know you are back, but you will not rise and surprise them with their hands full with green turfs of your garden, because you are afraid you will not recognise your voice when you shout at them.


 


The bus stop.  An old men and tow ladies are already there before you.  You see the two ladies quite often, the old man less frequently. You never knew where he went, because you always leave him behind in the station, sitting quiet on the bench, reading a newspaper, as if he came there only to sit and read that newspaper. This morning, he is wearing a new suit, but he is still sitting and reading his newspaper.  The two ladies are already on their daily gossip.   You notice the golden thing gleaming in the right ring finger of the youngest, and you notice how often she puts the right hand on her hair.  You are not certain whether the golden ring had always been there. The other lady raises a hand to her mouth –to yawn or to hide a smile - The bus arrives.


 


The office.  A pile of letters on the desk.  The two gentlemen next to you are staring at you in apprehension.  You stare back for a few seconds, a silent pledge to be left in peace.  You look down at your hands fumbling through the pile of letters, not knowing which one to open first, then your hands stop moving suddenly.  This is not your desk.  


 


The way home.  You get off the bus.  You perceive the old man walking ahead slowly, with the newspaper folded carefully under his arm.  He is wearing the same suit, but it looks worn and washed out.  You realise it is the same old suit he had always been in.


 


Home.  A line of ants comes out of a crack in the wall of the hallway and extends to the kitchen.  You follow to see where it ends.  They are everywhere on the floor, gathering on the specks of sugar that fell from the spoon this morning while you were trying to give your coffee taste.    They are also there on the table, around the cup of coffee and all over it.  Some have fallen in the cold drink and drowned.


 


Night, bedroom.  The bed is undone; the clothes are scattering messily on the carpet.  You move forward on the tip of your toes, like you were afraid to wake someone, and you lie on the bed.  You hesitate to light the lamp after you got on the bed; the lump shade is too far on the other side, and darkness is so irresistible.   You grope your toes deep inside the sheets, and you do not try to tell yourself there’s nothing to be found.  You know you will have to start it all over again.  You look from the window, and they are there, the hours, black and rumbling like an approaching storm, ready to clench a grip around you; you do not fight back, and like a big ripe fruit, something inside you that has been building up during the day now gets so heavy that it starts to pull you down, down.



by iyacooby (Viewed 109 times)

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Other Critiques of this Work
Given By: Katina
Critique Date:05/11/2008

Critique: Great! I really liked how you listed the elements in this piece. It gave the story more of a research essay feel, without the dryness, or boring read! :) If that makes any sense. Very, very creative work here. This could be the first chapter of a book, "hint, hint," something to ponder! Good job. I'm rating you 4 Starts for the unique feel, creativity and well-written paragraphs. Glad you joined the community. I'm already a fan! ---Katina
[View Replies]

Grade:Excellent


Given By: Dennis
Critique Date:05/11/2008

Critique:You discribe so easily what so many people do for years on end. Sought of put it in overdrive and carry on. Life can put you on your toes and sometimes it is uphill just to carry on.  You write well, very coherently that takes the reader's mind for a little escape from their own routine to yours, and they relate. Thanks for sharing. Dennis
[View Replies]

Grade:Good


Given By: bluemoon
Critique Date:05/11/2008

Critique:Hi. I really like the way you presented this, like a personal journal or diary entry. I think most people can relate to these feelings at some stage in their lives, losing a grip on reality and focusing on insignificant detail to block out painful issues. This is good but has the potential to be excellent with a few edits. I would like to suggest some changes to you by PM or e-mail if that's ok. Good write & excellent presentation.
[View Replies]

Grade:Good


 
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