Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Strangers by the River

We remained there for over an hour
on that bench. We waited,
until the light faded away
and we knew that the day was ending.

He didn't speak, and
I could think of nothing more to say.
So we sat in silence; and for a time,
I could still feel the warmth
emanating from the spot
where his hand had rested
next to mine,
before he pulled away.

I didn't want to look at him,
or see the unquestionable hurt in his eyes.
I knew that it was my fault,
that all the yearning, curiosity and excitement in them
had disappeared.

But I did glance over,
just once,
when the sun was flickering
behind the trees
across the water.

He was staring out in front, still as anything;
and for the first time since we'd met
I couldn't even guess what was
running through his mind.

His eyes were guarded and distant,
and I realised then that
it was too late;
we'd never be close again.


It was a quiet place;
far enough from the chaos
of everyone's to-ing and fro-ing
for us not to hear it.
And it was getting to that time of day
when even the stragglers agreed
it was a good idea to go home.

So we had that space to ourselves.
And it should have been peaceful;
but when the sun finally sank below the horizon,
I couldn't help but feel it took a part of us with it.
I'm sure that if anyone passed us at all
they'd have thought we were simply
strangers by the river,
sharing the twilight.

And in a way, we were.

Tumblr_m9egu3ygdt1qzt15co1_500_large

Monday, October 22, 2012

"So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”

He had been waiting long enough;
                     and he wanted it all to cease,
    to stop,
                            to end.

It wasn't that it made him mad;

it didn't frustrate him,
            or send a rage boiling up inside.

It was merely tiring,
       and the weariness
               tore away at his heart,
      and made him feel weak,

helpless,

a    dandelion      in            the                  wind.

She had to make her mind up, he decided.

Because there was only so much more he could take
before he crumbled,
                      and all the fire that was once there
                                                 burned away into the past.

He had been waiting long enough.

245305510922814271_qhxfvhy7_c_large

Saturday, October 20, 2012

do not think that you are something.

I'd always had this yearning to be someone extraordinary. And secretly, I'd hoped that I already was; that I had something special to offer that no one else had. So accepting that I was in fact ordinary, perhaps even less than that, was one of the hardest things I've done.

Tumblr_mbf2eqjc671qdzpwbo1_r1_500_large

caught up in a story.

“And that taught me you can't have anything, you can't have anything at all. Because desire just cheats you. It's like a sunbeam skipping here and there about a room. It stops and gilds some inconsequential object, and we poor fools try to grasp it - but when we do the sunbeam moves on to something else, and you've got the inconsequential part, but the glitter that made you want it is gone.”  - F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Beautiful and Damned

37aa65ca709e593d809e1eabb4b12237_large

Friday, October 19, 2012

capture me, trust me in your dream.

"A sentimental person thinks things will last; a romantic person hopes against hope that they won't." - F. Scott Fitzgerald.

203858320602947815_pyh7s028_c_large

action is character.

“Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now.” - W. H. Murray

 Tumblr_mc47fxmmsi1r0sc05o1_500_large

no other way

She was bitten by the wind again.
And she didn't know
whether to run and hide,
or to stay
and accept the hidden truths
she didn't want to believe.

It was all ending;
the people, places that
she had once known,
had once loved,
reduced to fragments
of sunken memories.

So how could she endure,
after that?
How could she start afresh,
when she felt as old and broken
as the home she grew up in?

To go on, she had to
find a reason for being,
existing, thriving;
someone better and
braver than herself
- someone to be excited by,
enraged at, enthralled by -
someone to be desired,
and kept safe.

There was no other way.

7_large

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Mauer.

and i can't promise you that i won't let you down.

"Don't be pathetic, it's easy. Just tell me something true. Tell me. Tell me now."

Tumblr_mbmwnntkvo1r4uqono1_500_large

Saturday, October 6, 2012

The Butterfly Effect

I often wonder if I’d be better off if I hadn’t left the house that day. I honestly think that yes, I’d probably be a much happier person if I hadn’t. And it is funny, in a way, that all of us tend to look back and think, ‘maybe I shouldn’t have done that,’ or ‘maybe I should have said this instead of that,’ when, at the time, whatever we did or didn’t do seemed the most logical.

I know it won’t change anything, but I keep thinking about the little things that morning that led to me being on that bus at eleven fifty-eight. Like how I’d forgotten to reset my alarm, or how on leaving the house I couldn’t find my key, and how before that, I couldn’t even decide what to eat for breakfast. They were all things that by themselves wouldn’t have had any impact on my day whatsoever. Yet together, they paved the way for me to be caught up in something I doubt anyone would ever want to be a part of.

***

It was never going to be a pleasant day. I knew that before it started raining, before I got on the bus to Uni with the foggy windows and damp seats and air that made my stomach turn. Dragging myself down to the kitchen to find something to eat, I’d stood facing the window, looking out onto the garden. Thanks to the shadow cast by the clouds overhead, it had had this sombre, guarded look about it. Had I known what was to happen later on, I would have described these clouds as ominous or foreboding, but then and there, all the clouds meant was rain. And all rain meant was an umbrella, boots and maybe not my favourite coat.

Even so, I was having a slow start that morning, and the glum weather made me want to draw it out even further. So I decided to give it another hour and miss my first class; nobody else was home, so I didn’t even have to feel guilty about it.

***

I must have underestimated how long it would take, or had deliberately done everything slower than usual, because the extra hour I’d given myself came and went sooner than I expected, and instead of feeling relaxed when I finally made it out the front door, I felt more anxious than I’d been all morning.

***

I wish I could say that something told me not to get on that bus. Maybe I should have taken into account the broken windscreen wiper on the left side. But in all honesty, I doubt I noticed that until afterwards.

The bus came two minutes late. With the heating on, the windows had fogged up on the inside, and people had been writing things on them with their fingers. Getting on, all I could think was that I couldn’t breathe through the warm odour of tacky perfume mingled with the wet dog smell of musty seats, so I didn’t realise I’d sat down at least four rows in front of where I usually felt comfortable.

We were all going to the same place; that was evident enough. If I’d been blind I would know we were students by the conversations people were having. But I’ve never been drawn to people acting like experts about things they barely know anything about. And that was why my attention ended up focused on a boy across the aisle from me, just in front of the doors. He was reading one of my favourite books, and I immediately felt an affinity with him, deciding that if we had gone to school together we’d have been friends - which was a bit stupid really. My friends didn’t read at all.

He must have felt my eyes on him, the way you can always sense if someone is watching you, because he closed his book and turned his head my way. I hadn’t noticed; worlds away, I was imagining the conversation about that book that we’d never have. But the sudden movement snapped me back, and after some brief and awkward eye contact I diverted my attention beyond him to what I could see through the window, and tried to pretend that that was where I’d been looking the entire time.

Through the clouded, wet glass, the world appeared blurry and distorted. The overcast sky, the river and the houses on the opposing shore were all joined by the grey haze of rain hammering the water. And even though she was difficult to see, I did notice the girl riding her bike alongside the bus. But it took me a moment or two to figure out why something about it didn’t seem right.

Why she was by the edge of the road in the emergency lane, rather than on the path that would have been the obvious choice, I’ll never know. But it shouldn’t have mattered why. People do things without explanation all the time.

Still, I couldn’t help but wonder if the bus driver knew she was there, or if he could see her at all. I’d taken the same route for long enough to know that the lane she was in was going to end in another twenty metres, and because she didn’t look like she was moving to the path any time soon, she had two choices. One was to take her chances and ride out in front of the bus, or the safer option, to slow down and let the traffic go past. If I had been in her position I know what I would have done. Except that I wasn’t.

I nearly said something. Honestly, I really did consider telling the driver to look out for her. But as usual my tongue got the better of me and refused to let a word out. Or maybe I was just too damn self-aware.

***

Often it’s the in-between moments that you remember most. I remember realising that my watch had come undone and I remember that I looked down to fix it. It’s strange now, to think that that moment was the last time I really felt that I knew who I was and what I stood for. Up until then, I’d never considered that the consequence of my not acting could affect me so deeply.

The chaos came in the seconds that followed. I didn’t see it happen, but I heard it. Felt it. Yet I’m not sure what came first - the jolt forward as the bus screeched to a halt, the shrieks of the people around me, the crunching noise, or the dull thud of something heavy rebounding off tempered glass.

I used to think that the not-remembering was from the shock of it, and that it would have all come back to me by now. But no matter how hard I try to piece it back together, it remains a blur, and is the reason why I was never counted as a reliable witness.

What I do recall is looking up again and realising that the day had been turned on its head. There was a deathly quiet. Music had stopped and the conversations ceased.

The few people who had been standing had fallen down onto each other; someone had caught his forehead on a stop button and a trickle of blood was slowly making its way down his face. But he didn’t appear to notice; even when it reached his lip and he would have been able to taste the saltiness. While everything continued on around us, for a moment or two it felt like the only indication that the world hadn’t frozen was the pattering of rain on the windows.

The bus driver broke the quiet by opening the doors and the barrier that separated him from the rest of us. Turning back before he shuffled out, he said, “Don’t get out, kids,” but his heart wasn’t in it.

The doors were left open and the boy who’d hit his head was the first to find his feet. Then, curious as ever, we all found ourselves edging slowly out of our seats and tentatively stepping down and into the rain. If a part of me didn’t want to know what lay in wait outside, it was overcome by the fear that if I didn’t get out with everyone else, they would know. They would know that I had something to do with it.

***

The driver was a big hulking block of a man, and if I’d been younger I might have been frightened by the sheer size of him. But I doubt anyone could have been afraid of him at that moment, not with the way his shoulders drooped and how he seemed to fall in on himself as he knelt there. It was strange and somewhat unnerving to see how someone so large could appear so small. I guess that’s what happens to you when your spirit is crushed and your life has taken a turn you never saw coming.

The bike had snapped in two. Half of it was under the bus, and I think the only reason that the same didn’t happen to the girl who’d been riding it was because of the peculiar angle of the impact. And there she was; helmet askew, lying in the arms of the driver on the wet, miserable road while the blood on her arms and legs kept getting washed away by the heavy rain.

We had to face the facts - we couldn’t do anything about it. We weren’t qualified or able to do anything at all. The most we could do was reassure ourselves, “She’s breathing, she’s breathing, she’s okay.” And for a while there, she was.

But by the time the ambulance and police arrived we couldn’t be sure anymore. And when they took her away, we were just left there with a bus that barely had a scratch on it. Traffic returned to normal, but we couldn’t.

A girl who’d been standing beside me ran over to the water’s edge and vomited onto the concrete that stopped the bank from falling into the river. The rest of us just stood there, waiting, and I couldn’t stand it. I couldn’t stand being as helpless as the rest of them. Not to mention that I couldn’t help feeling somewhat responsible. If I’d said something, maybe none of this would have happened.

I didn’t know how I was going to get back on a bus after all that. But I knew that I probably would. And even though I wanted to walk away, to keep walking until my knees hurt and my legs ached and my feet blistered, I didn’t move. 

***

Rain_on_a_window_by_braidsandarrows-d5155bm_large