imaginary256

Archive for the ‘Stories’ Category

Ruins of War (part 1)

In Stories on November 15, 2008 at 7:13 pm

The stench of week-old blood and dirty bandages makes the air thick, unbreathable. A man coughs and a child cries out, awoken by the sound. Her mother, shuffling around in bed, uncovers her breast and gives it to the child, now comforted. Both fall into unrestful sleep. The man coughs again. Nothing stirs.

We are the ruins of war. I the nurse, they the unwanted war booty, the sick, injured, disheartened; men who cannot labor and women who cannot be labored upon. They took the children, lead them to a gas-room and gassed them all. Outside this make-shift tent, ash falls from the sky like rain. It is the ash of our children. Our future in ashes.

We thought they would come to free us. Our soldiers. People. The rest of civilization. Many a day have passed, I have lost count. The sick have not been counting down to freedom. They have been counting down to death. That is their freedom now. And the disheartened? Some sit on the dirt floor, limbs wet with urine, feaces and blood. Indifferent. Others go on like the world as we know it has not been attacked, incinerated and forgotten. They speak of their businesses (that have been burnt), their families (that have been burnt) and memories from yesterday (that have been burnt).

“Be thankful,” they told us, “that we are letting you go. We could keep your women and make you work as slaves, even in ill health. But our hearts are merciful.”

And they then scoffed, turned and left us with no food, water, shelter or ground. And we were thankful. In that moment, we were thankful. The old women say now we are unrepentant again. This war is punishment for our sins. The sins are ours. Mine. Yours. We are comrades in sin. Our sin is life. And their rosaries protect them from a merciful, benevolent god.

(to be continued when I have less homework)

Travel

In Stories on October 14, 2008 at 5:51 pm

She rolls over to the smell of wet earth and clings to foreign bedsheets like dewdrops. Waking up to rain is an unfamiliar pleasure. The phone rings. It is her wake up call (wasn’t it supposed to be earlier?). Breakfast will be served till ten which gives her an hour and a half to shower, get dressed and finish before nine.

There is no one in the elevator when she gets on and the restaurant is half-empty. The morning rush has passed and others have not woken yet. Perfect. Its like waking up at dawn.

“Table for one?”

She’s lead to the table by a sleepy-blue-eyed waitress in her teracotta-beige uniform. Loose-fitting jacket and trousers, pale yellow trim. She wouldnt mind having breakfast with her.

“Coffee or tea?”

“Coffee please.”

The waitress smiles her practiced everyday smile. Soft, a little too far off somewhere with just the right amount of hesitation, sincerity. She will now go smile at other customers, lead them to their tables and serve them coffee. Or tea.

~*~

“I would like a bellman sent up to my room please.

Thank you”

Theres a soft ding-ding sound. The door bell. They have doorbells for hotel rooms now. It makes sense.

“Can I help you ma’am?”

“Yes, I’m checking out. My luggage is over there.”

He loads the solitary bag onto his cart and wheels it toward the elevators. This is one of those jobs feminists arent screaming about.

The elevator ride was comfortable. The bellman made no conversation and there was no compulsion to. She could have stayed in the elevator for hours, comfortably silent. He had a name-tag on his jacket. Something long. She didnt look at it for long. Just a glance. No eye-contact. Comfortable.

“How may I help you, ma’am?”

The receptionist forced a welcoming good morning and hello, followed by a practiced smile. His eyes were sharp, harsh. She missed the waitress.

~*~

Whisper (part 3)

In Stories on July 5, 2008 at 12:59 pm

Whisper….whisper….

The word is caught in my head as the wind blows softly but carries no sound of yours. Distant music from some far off restaurant wafts in the heavy air. You would love it here, this beach, the sand, the water and its foam. There are few sea-gulls here. I suppose that means there are not very many fish in the sea. None like you, anyways.

I wish to fall asleep here, with the waves carying out sand from under me – sinking. I wonder if I’ll wake up to find a message in a bottle you’ve sent me. I wonder if I’ll wake up at all.

May the waves carry me to where you are.

Whisper (part 2)

In Stories on June 29, 2008 at 1:45 pm

It has been a while since our flares made these pallid waters blush. First mine, then yours, then ours spelling out words that only we understood. And perhaps, some strangers that we never knew, and an old sailor out on the water.

…—…

.. .—-. –  …. . .-. .

And we’re still here.

Whisper

In Stories on June 29, 2008 at 5:51 am

…into the wind, and maybe your words will be carried through to where the waters rush in to embrace the land. How long, I wonder, since a singular droplet of salt water met its material opposite in the sand to make them greet each other fiercely and then part again. How long since the breeze kissed wisps of hair on a lover’s face. How long since you remembered and believed and spoke…

(to be continued…)