Tuesday 31 January 2012

March 11th


  There really wasn't that much I could do when the brown parcel arrived at my doorstep that morning. I remember sitting in my favourite chair, a light green affair, facing the glass door and window that overlooked my balcony on the first floor. The manilla parcel was propped on my lap, similar to how a father would sit a child, before telling them a tall tale before bed.
Since hearing the news it has been most awfully rainy, but today, the morning sun shone pale and alone in the sky, its morning rays rolling over the hills and valleys like pastry. The sunlight did nothing more than make the surroundings shine a muddy, decayed brown.
I usually lean against my balcony and watch the life of the countryside sway by. I can see a good two miles from here, all the hills and fields that surround this place like pigeons over bread. the vast armys of trees stand proud in their ranks, and the greenish, greenish grass of the country farms. Up until today, I was used to seeing them coated in a fine rain; the faintest of drizzles that threw itself down with such grim force and determination that one could have mistook it for splinters of a falling sky.
The two things I remember most, as I heard those immortal words for the very first time, was the constant patter of rain against the glass and the cold brass against my ear. She had relayed the news on the telephone, chocking back tears louder and more ferocious than any storm cloud could ever muster. I do not remember if I cried myself; my most vivid recollection after that was that I had planned where I would put a commemorative plaque. It would be just outside her door. It would be light blue, white lettering.
We kept a close correspondence by telephone or letter, though we only saw each other face to face on the occasional weekend. I'm rather glad she didn't tell me the news face to face. I would have hated to remember her in that way.
I slumped heavily in my chair, and called the maid to bring me a tea. I picked up the parcel and read the label for a second time:

The final letter of Harriet Buxton

the maid had told me that grief works indifferent ways for different people, and that in a day or two this might all swell over me, bringing no end to tears, grief, and hurt. All I did was reread the label for a third, fourth and fifth time.
I stared out of the window, wishing it would start raining again in torrents, just as it had been doing. I was surprised when it did so, the first few droplets shattering against the balcony oor, window, then finally an entire tundra of rain showered over the never ending green hills.
Today was March 11th, a day that will echo throughout my memory as one of the darkest days I have ever faced. She was thirty-two.  

Wednesday 11 January 2012

i always think in the wrong direction

everyone else worries about different things from me.

for example, if you are home alone, or walking down a dark street, what do you worry about? most people i've asked worry about attackers, or burgulars, or real life situations.
 
in this situation i worry about ghosts and monsters. i don't give a moments thaught to chavs or murderers or things like that. because they are easily stopped. you can't stop ghosts. i don't like the thaught of not knowing whats going on. i like to be in the loop with things. i can't stand mirrors, worried that i'll see something in them. faces in places and odd shapes in the dark are the real threats. you can hit a burgular with a pan, but something unknown, and unstoppable, will always win. i don't properly believe in these sorts of things, but still, if something looks a bit like a face, or something jolts, then my mind makes things up to fit it. probably due to a childhood watching doctor who, strange but true, x files, and all other sorts of ghost stories.