Friday, September 5, 2008

A Return to the Black

Dirt. It covered everything. Covered her bed, covered her chair, covered her dresser. Was it dirt or dust? Sometimes she could not tell, it was so fine. Yet it had indeed aspects of dirt--the itty bit of moisture, the way it clung beneath her fingernails.

She was living in a barren garden. Was she perhaps the plant? The fragile orchid growing in the damp conditions? If so, she was certainly wilting here. No sun at all, for days and days on end. Dark, weathered curtains shielded her from that vicious warmth-bringer.

"Matti," one of them whispered sweetly into her ear. "Matti, when do you think you'll see the sun again?" She moaned incoherently in response.

"Matti." This one was a more masculine voice, cultured and melodious. "Matti, you know every old house has a ghost to haunt it, no?" She nodded, rocking back and forth on her dirty bed. "Matti...you are that ghost." This was only greeted with more moans.

"You are a ghost, Matti," the voice insisted. "A ghost, a shadow. You are no longer a human being with a physical, lively essence. If they see you at all, they will be frightened." His voice turned into an unpleasant hiss as it neared her ear. Her eyes popped open of their own accord, fright flooded into irises the color of the little blue pills she once took.

"Yes," another joined in eagerly, sprightly, almost. "They're all afraid of you. That's why he left you--he couldn't take the daily horror of you." She squirmed in her bed, closing her eyes shut at the thought of it.

"Face it," yet another insinuated. "Face it. You are a freak." There was a slow certainty in the words, an horrifically comforting feel to them. The other voices chuckled and cackled in agreement. She was certain she heard the clinking of glasses together, as though it were a toast. A toast to madness.

Dirt, dirt, dirt. Even the packaging of the leftover bags of chips and snack cakes she had eaten before she had run out of food entirely were beginning to disentegrate, coagulate into dirt. The dirt tangled in her now greasy hair. The dirt stained her two-week old pyjamas, stained her bare feet, stained her hands.

Matti curled up into a ball on that dirty bed, her arms tightening around her bent legs. She leaned down her head and began biting at her knee, hard. The talking continued, the casual conversations on the horror that was Matti. Her grip on her knee slackened. Blood filled her mouth. Filled her lifeless mouth.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

well-done, C! this is powerful...

Anonymous said...

This is so beautiful. You're the kind of writer that makes me want to write, the kind of writer that I hope to be one day. From what I've read in this blog you're really gifted!