Tuesday 7 December 2010

Untitled

She was tired. She felt exhaustion in the marrow of her bones, weighing her down until her limbs were lead. She felt it in the pit of her stomach like a stone. It was only six o’clock and already she could feel her eyes beginning to slide closed, her head veering dangerously towards the window.

The little girl who sat across the bus aisle watched in fascination as the breath from Rachel’s open, slightly snoring mouth began to fog up the window. It was cold outside, that Friday night in November, and the breath formed tiny crystals against the glass. It was still early but the sun was nothing more than a rosy glimmer on the horizon. The sky overhead was a deep, thunder-gray shot through with silver. There was snow in the forecast. The city would be coated in downy whiteness by morning and everyone was rushing home to spend the night tucked into blankets, ready to watch the tiny white flakes melt into darkness.

Rachel didn’t care about any of that. She was just trying to get home. There were another four chapters of biochem to read before the exam next Wednesday and a paper due on Tuesday that she desperately needed to start researching.

And she had to get up early for work tomorrow. She was still in her waitressing uniform and the dark cotton was heavy with the scent of grease. She’d been serving up burgers and fries since class let out at ten, and she could smell the French fries in her hair.

Hopefully she could get some work done before her father got home. Hopefully, she thought, allowing her eyes to slide shut, he wouldn’t come home at all.

The bus jolted to a heavy stop, throwing all of the passengers forwards as the doors squeezed open. Mournfully, she dragged her eyes open, scooped up her things and pulled herself off of the bus, trudging three blocks to their apartment building.

The cold bit her face, turning her cheeks a fierce red and making her eyes water. She was grateful that it woke her up enough to get her home, but a jaw-cracking yawn hit her as soon as the keys were in the door.

She shed her coat as the warmth of the apartment hit her, dropping it on the couch. She wandered through the messy living room to the kitchen. There were clothes everywhere, scattered across the couch and piled on the floor. Empty food containers lined the coffee table and most of the counters in the kitchen, punctuated by empty bottles and water stains where other bottles had been. The dishes in the sink were stacked haphazardly, as though they were abandoned by a careless child.

She would wash the dishes later, she decided, as she slid a lean cuisine out of the freezer and into the microwave.

No other part of the mess belonged to her. She had promised herself that she wouldn’t clean up after him anymore, but she needed the dishes to eat off of, so she would wash them.

Sitting at the sticky dining room table, she picked through the edible parts of the microwaveable meal and drank a glass of water. She left the carton from the food on the table. He wouldn’t notice it anyway.

Shifting back into the living room, she dragged her heavy backpack with her onto the couch and pulled the biochem book onto her lap. It sat there like a stone for several moments before she opened it, trying to force her tired eyes to concentrate on the chemical makeup of the digestive tract, but it was no good. The colors wavered before her eyes, the words blurring and becoming incomprehensible.

Maybe, she thought, as she closed the book and put it back into her bag, if she just closed her eyes for fifteen or twenty minutes, she would be able to concentrate. Maybe, she thought as she yawned and lay back against the pillows of the smelly old couch. Her eyes focused on the clock on the VCR. It was 6:40. If she just slept till 7, she’d still be able to get everything done just fine.

She woke up the sound of breaking glass. Jumping up in the darkness, her bleary eyes could just make out a beer bottle smashed against the far wall of the living room, right next to the kitchen. The clock on the VCR told her it was 10:30, but she didn’t need that to figure out what time it was. The figure bellowing at her in the dark doorway was more than enough.

“You stupid cow!”

She didn’t even cringe at the words. She was used to them by now. Swinging her legs off of the couch, she sat up and glanced over at him.

“Hi, Dad,” she said.

“Why’s this place such a mess?” he growled. “Didn’t I tell you to clean it up?”

She could smell the beer on his breath even from the couch, or perhaps she imagined she could.

“I told you I wasn’t cleaning up after you anymore.”

Her words were quiet. He didn’t say anything for a few moments. Maybe, she thought, he hadn’t heard her.

“I pay the rent in this stinking hellhole. I am YOUR FATHER!!! I deserve RESPECT!!”

The words were slurred, started out belligerently quiet and ending in a roar.

“I pay my half of the rent, too,” she told him quietly.

“I said, CLEAN THIS DAMN PLACE UP.”

He moved surprisingly quickly to the couch, grabbing her arm in a grip hard enough to bruise.

“I won’t.”

She looked up into his red-rimmed eyes. The smell rolling off of him was nauseating.

“You lazy little SLUT!”

The slap was audible, openhanded and she felt the entire left side of her face sting. She hadn’t been expecting it yet. She wasn’t ready and the blow hurt more than it would have otherwise. Tears sprang to her eyes and she hoped he was too drunk to see them. She wouldn’t cry in front of him. Not anymore.

“CLEAN IT!”

The shove sent her spinning across the room and she crashed into the wall. The framed photos on the wall shivered and she sank down, coming to rest on the floor. It was easier to stay down, she knew. He mostly left her alone when she stayed down.

His footsteps thundered through the floor as he stalked away into the kitchen to get another beer. She got up quietly, moving quickly across the room to her bedroom. The flimsy lock on the bedroom door wouldn’t keep him out, she knew, but it was better than nothing.

He didn’t bother breaking the lock this time and she was grateful. She moved around the room, grabbing things from the dresser; some clean underwear, some tops and a couple of pairs of jeans went into a spare backpack, along with a few books and her spare waitressing uniform. She rooted through the sock drawer and it took her a minute to find the stash of cash she’d been secreting away for a few months now. It wasn’t much, but hopefully it was enough. She topped it off with a couple of sweaters and the thing barely zipped, but finally she got it closed. She sat by the door to her bedroom and listened, knees pressed against her chest, ear to the door. It felt like hours before she heard it, but it couldn’t have been more than twenty minutes.

His snoring was raucous and loud enough to penetrate the wood of the door. She was lucky. He had passed out quickly tonight. Once she made her choice, she didn’t want to have to wait. She had been planning on leaving for weeks now. Ok, years, now that she admitted it to herself. And now that she was ready to go, she didn’t want to look back. She slid her biochem book off of the coffee table and back into her school bag. As quietly as she could, she put on her coat, wearing one backpack and carrying the other. She paused at the door and looked back at her father’s prone body sprawled across the couch, hoping that it was the last time she would have to look at his sorry ass.

She didn’t know where she was going as she closed that door behind her, but she knew that anywhere would be better than here.

Her feet clattered loudly on the stairs as she ran out of the building. For three floors the echo of her sneakers against the metal steps rang in her ears, but finally she was outside with her breath steaming in the air. It wasn’t very late yet, barely past eleven, but the sidewalk was empty. It had begun snowing sometime during the night and now there was a solid inch or two on the frozen ground, softening the sound of her footsteps again the street.

The buses weren’t running anymore and her feet took her down the block to the subway. She rushed down the subway steps. She knew he wouldn’t wake up, knew he couldn’t catch her, but she ran anyway, as if a fire was licking her heels.

She was digging for change in her bag, trying to scrape together enough so that she wouldn’t have to break a dollar when the noise reached her. It wasn’t much, but the shouting from the tunnel below froze her. Men were shouting down there and, while she couldn’t make out the words, she knew it wasn’t good.

It was the scream that got her moving again. It was a woman’s scream, high-pitched, drawn out and full of fear.

Swinging her bag onto her shoulders, she jumped the turnstile, skidding a little on the slick, slush-covered floor before tumbling down the stairs to the subway platform.

She would’ve known they were thugs even if they hadn’t been brutalizing that poor old woman. The three guys just had a certain look about them; crude and vulgar-looking from their stubbled faces and blood-shot eyes to their saggy jeans.

Two of them stood on the edge of the platform, holding the struggling old lady so that the top half of her body hovered in the empty air where the train would be in a minute. Something glittered in the cheap florescent light of the subway. Her breath caught in her chest as she saw that the third one held a knife.

“Just give us your wallet, lady,” he said. “And you won’t get hurt.”

They had their backs to her, unaware of their new audience. She didn’t get a chance to hear the old woman’s reaction. Blood pounded in her ears as she charged the one with the knife.

She didn’t know what she was doing, had never gotten in a fight before, but when she swung her spare backpack it connected with his face, knocking him backward so that he nearly fell off the platform.

“Leave me alone, you crazy Bitch!”

His voice echoed in the empty station. His words were slurred and his eyes were angry as he ran at her, stumbling slightly. Her knees began to shake as she realized just what she’d gotten herself into, but when she kicked out, her foot landed solidly, hitting the painful spot between his legs. And she scored a punch to the face as he went down, curled into a ball on the subway floor.

She hadn’t noticed the other two, but now that she looked up, she saw they had let the old woman go. They were several feet away now, backing slowly towards the stairs. She smiled at them, took one step in their direction and then another, wielding her spare backpack like a club. That was all it took before she heard their footsteps ringing on the stairs and out onto the street.

Rachel almost laughed, she could feel it warm in the back of her throat, but she pushed it back down as she remembered the old woman standing behind her.

“Are you ok?”

The woman didn’t answer, just stared back at Rachel. She wasn’t wearing a coat and Rachel was surprised that she wasn’t shivering in the damp subway air. All she had was an old sweater pulled over a flimsy house-dress. The stockings that covered her skinny old legs were wrinkled and the nursing shoes on her feet looked distinctly worse for wear. Rachel didn’t know why thugs like that would beat up an old woman for money, much less an old woman who didn’t have any money, but she shrugged it off. They were just a bunch of stupid druggies. They weren’t thinking at all.

But it didn’t look like they had done any serious damage.

The old woman had long white hair and piercing blue eyes in a wrinkled face. And she still hadn’t said anything.

“Did they hurt you?” Rachel asked. “Is there anything I can do to help?”

The old woman continued to stare, her gaze fierce and appraising. It was making Rachel a little uncomfortable. Maybe this old woman was crazy?

Rachel’s train pulled up before the woman could answer, if she was ever going to answer. She looked from the doors to the old lady standing in front of her and she made a choice. Briskly, she put her arm around the woman’s shoulders and steered her into the train car, putting her gently into the opposite seat.

“Can I take you anywhere?” she asked, looking into that intense blue gaze. Rachel stared back at the old woman, trying to figure out what to do. This had certainly not been her plan for the day. This morning when she woke up, she had a nice warm bed and an apartment to come home to. Now, she might as well consider herself homeless. Was the situation any different for the woman sitting in front of her? Surely she didn’t relish wandering around the cold streets late at night. And it didn’t seem like she had anyplace to go either. Pursing her lips, Rachel decided to bring the old woman with her, at least to the diner, which was going to be her first stop.

Rachel scrutinized the woman in front of her, wondering what her story was, when she noticed that the woman was shivering. Grudgingly, she pressed her lips tightly together and began rooting through one of her backpacks. She pulled a sweater out of her bag and handed it over.

The old woman shrugged it on and the shivering stopped. Rachel smiled. The old woman was so tiny it looked like she was drowning in the sweater, but at least she was warm.

There were a few stops to go and she divided her gaze between the unappealing black subway wall behind the dirty windows and the close-mouthed old woman sitting in front of her. She shifted herself at the stop before hers, arranging one backpack more comfortably on her shoulders and hugging the second one to her chest. She smiled at the old woman in what she hoped was an encouraging way. She glanced out the window once more before rising.

“Thank you.”

The words were whispered, but they were clearly audible. And when she looked again, the old woman was gone.

The doors slid open and she couldn’t get into the open air fast enough. She leaned against a light pole, catching her breath in the cold, damp street and trying to explain what had happened. Had she imagined the old lady? Had she imagined the thugs? Had she fallen asleep on the train and dreamed the entire thing? She didn’t know. Finally, she pushed the thing out of her mind and tried to think up a winning argument as she walked down the street towards the diner.

Most of the places in the area had closed down by this time of night. It was almost midnight, but the diner was still running a booming business. Mike kept the place open till one most nights, but if it was slow he’d close at midnight. The bright light was like a beacon in the dingy darkness of the surrounding street. And the bell rang as she shoved the door open and plopped down at the counter that ran most of the way through the restaurant.

“You looking to pick up extra hours?”

Mike grinned at her from the grill behind the bar as he handed off a cheeseburger and fries to one of the waitresses.

“Nope,” she said, trying to grin back, although she could barely find the energy to sit up straight. The adrenaline rush she’d felt in the subway was gone now and exhaustion had hit her like a brick. “I’m here as a paying customer. Can I get a plate of fries and some ranch?”

Mike looked at her warily. She never came in if she didn’t have to work and he knew it. She knew it too and tried for a cheerful smile as he set the plate in front of her. She didn’t meet his gaze, shoving the fries around the plate as he went back to work.

“Is Lisa here tonight?” she asked, looking at him for a moment.

“I knew there was a reason you were here,” he said, nodding at her as he flipped another burger. “She’s over there. Got tables 15 to 20 tonight.”

Wearily, she pushed herself off of the stool and made her feet walk over to the opposite side of the restaurant. Lisa had just taken somebody’s order and was sticking the pencil back in her long blonde pony tail as she headed back to the kitchen. But she stopped dead in her tracks when she saw Rachel.

“It happened again, didn’t it?” she asked.

Rachel nodded.

“And you left him?”

More nodding.

“Oh, my God!”

The ear-shattering squeal that followed was accompanied by a bone-crushing hug, surprising in someone as petite as Lisa.

“Lees, let me go. I can’t breathe.”

From a safe distance, Rachel smiled at her friend, genuinely this time.

“I need a place to stay,” she said, watching in dismay as her friend behind to fidget, no longer meeting her eyes.

“Tonight?”

“Yes, tonight,” she answered. “Of course tonight. Where else am I going to stay?”

Lisa still wouldn’t quite meet Rachel’s eyes, but when she did look up, there were tears in them.

“I can’t tonight,” she said, swiping at her eyes. “Max has a fever. My mom won’t let anybody stay tonight.”

The clattering of plates and silverware filled the silence between them.

“You told me,” Rachel said, tears forming in her own eyes. “You said that any time I needed someplace to stay, I could come to you. You told me I should leave. You said, whenever I needed, your door was open.”

“Anytime,” Lisa said. “But not tonight.” She looked up again. “Tomorrow. You can stay for a while. I promise.”

She brushed a blonde strand back behind her ear and edged around her friend on her way to the kitchen.

Rachel stood there for a moment, trying to keep the tears in, before she forced her legs to move, to carry her back to the counter and pull herself back in front of the greasy plate of fries. And she pushed them around again as she contemplated her dilemma. Really, she didn’t have anyone else to go to. Nobody else knew about her dad or the way he treated her. And she didn’t want anybody else to know.

She was trying to remember where the nearest homeless shelter was, staring down at her fries, which were swiftly growing cold, when a hand crossed into her field of vision, picking up a fry. She looked up just in time to see Mike pop the fry into his mouth.

“I heard about your little problem,” he told her, chewing thoughtfully.

“Yeah?”

Her eyebrow quirked up. Mike had always been nice to her, but it had never been anything personal.

“Yeah,” he said, his bushy caterpillar eyebrows looked as though they were trying to touch each other. “And I think I might have a solution.”

“I am NOT staying at your place.” Her eyes flared a little in alarm. “I barely even know you.”

“You’re not staying at my place,” he said. “As though I would let you. But you can stay here.”

“Here?” she asked, looking around at the grungy diner. “Thanks for the offer, but booths don’t exactly make good mattresses.”

“I’ve got a cot set up in the back,” he told her. When both of her eyes brows rose into her dark hairline, he continued. “Sometimes the food vendors make really early deliveries and it’s easier to just spend the night here than to hike back from my apartment at three in the morning. The sheets are clean and everything.”

“Ok,” she nodded. “Thank you.”

She blushed a little, looking back down at her plate. Of all the sources that help could have come from, she hadn’t been expecting this one.

“I’m not just going to let you stay for free,” he said.

She cast a disgruntled look in his direction as he threw an apron at her.

“Dishwasher duty for the rest of the night,” he said, grinning.

Shoving her bags behind the counter, she rolled up her sleeves and prepared to plunge her arms in the soapy water. It was a small price to pay.

It was almost two in the morning before all of the dishes were washed and all of the tables had been wiped down. Mike waved at her through the glass of the door as he locked up and walked away. She had the place to herself, sitting on the cot in the back. It was eerily quiet, compared to what she was used to.

With a sigh, she remembered that she still had work to do. She pulled on an old t-shirt and a pair of cotton shorts to sleep in and sat on the bed, focusing a tiny book light on her old enemy, the biochem book.

She must have fallen asleep. The battery from her book light had burned out and her book was sprawled across her chest. The air was murky-dark. Some light penetrated the windows of the glass-fronted diner, but even that was mottled by the still-falling snow. But it wasn’t light that had woken her. It was noise. And she heard it again.

Someone was banging on the door to the diner.

The floor was cold as she forced herself off of the cot and walked across the floor to the main dining area. The light danced across the tile floor, mesmerizing and shifting in the half-darkness, and, as she stepped in front of the bar, she didn’t want to look up. But she did.

He stood there, a black silhouette against the light. He seemed so much bigger than she had ever imagined him; taller, stronger, more threatening than she had ever known. She didn’t know how he had found her, but he stood there as though he had stepped out of her nightmares.

Looking at him, she could see none of the familiar man she had known. This was not the man who had pushed her on the swings as a little girl, who had taught her how to ride a bike or driven her to school on rainy days. This man was not her father anymore. For the first time, she looked at him and felt no connection to him at all.

In fact, all she felt was fear.

He hammered on the door again, shaking it as though he would shiver the glass to bits and her knees went weak with fear. She had to clutch at the counter to keep herself upright.

She had no keys to let him in, but that made no difference. He would, she knew, find a way in, and soon. And it would be different this time. This would not be a shove against a wall or a black eye. She shuddered at the idea of her blood splattered against the clean white tile floor, but knew she could not stop it. No amount of shouting or fighting back would stop him, she knew. This would not end well.

She cringed at the sound of breaking glass as his fist finally broke through the glass of the door and cowered downward, curling into a ball and trying to make herself as small of a target as possible. His hand was slick with blood and she felt it slide a little as he seized her by the hair and began to pull her back up. Another hand found its way to her throat and she felt it begin to squeeze.

“How dare you?” he whispered into her face and she tried to pull away from the smell of liquor on his breath, knowing full well it wouldn’t do any good. He didn’t let go of her hair, but, suddenly, he froze.

Her eyes were drawn to the street outside as the light seemed to grow brighter. And her eyes widened as she saw that the glow centered around the old woman she had met in the subway. She was still wearing Rachel’s sweater, which looked a little odd hanging loose and baggy on top of the cotton dress. The bright blue gaze was now centered, searingly, on the situation at hand. She spoke quietly, but Rachel heard every word.

“Let her go,” she said.

The pressure on Rachel’s throat disappeared and he disentangled his hand from her hair, stepping back. The look on his face was dazed, almost trancelike, but she didn’t care as long as she could breathe again. The old woman’s voice continued.

“She is not yours anymore,” she said firmly. “You will leave her alone. You will never seek her out again. You will let her live her own life.”

As though he had not intended to do anything else that night, he turned simply around and walked back out of the broken glass doorway. He didn’t look back and Rachel was grateful.

“Th-thank you,” she said, hands gingerly rubbing her neck. “How did you do that?”

“Just a little bit of magic,” the old woman said. Rachel could’ve sworn that she winked.

“Magic.” After all what had just happened, she was prepared to accept magic. After all, it had just saved her life. “But why?”

The old woman smiled, showing off surprisingly white teeth.

“Because one good turn certainly deserves another.”

“Oh.” Her head still felt groggy and the swirling snow outside was making it spin. “What do I do now?”

“Whatever you want, really. I, however, would recommend going back to sleep.”

That seemed like a good idea, as an enormous yawn escaped her mouth, nearly cracking her jaw.

She smiled at the old woman and padded slowly into the back room. She turned around for a moment, hoping to say something, although she could never quite figure out what that was and found the old woman gone. The door, however, was completely intact.

It was as if the recent events had never happened. But as she closed her eyes and slept peacefully for the first time in a long time.

Wednesday 1 December 2010

Bones

My body disinterred.

Yup. That sounds nice. It’s almost poetic. It’s much better than what I’d have to say otherwise, which is “They’re digging up some dried-up old bones that used to belong to me.”

Nobody wants to hear that.

It’s funny, watching them. It doesn’t even feel like me anymore. I can barely remember what it felt like, to have wind in my hair or to feel grass prickle against my bare feet. That was life.

And this is death.

I was beautiful once. They may never know it, but I was. I had long silky dark hair and big brown eyes. People used to turn around just to watch me walk down the street.

And now I’m just a pile of moldy bones.

Friday 26 November 2010

Untitled

This is another chunk of the same story that I posted from last night. I'm not done with it yet, but I'm almost done. I feel good about it, though. Hopefully the message that I mean for it to carry will come through at the end. Once again, skipped a bunch between the last piece and this one. Hopefully it's comprehensible on its own.

- Lena

Most of the places in the area had closed down by this time of night. It was almost midnight, but the diner was still running a booming business. Mike kept the place open till one most nights, but if it was slow he’d close at midnight. The bright light was like a beacon in the dingy darkness of the surrounding street. And the bell rang as she shoved the door open and plopped down at the counter that ran most of the way through the restaurant.

“You looking to pick up extra hours?”

Mike grinned at her from the grill behind the bar as he handed off a cheeseburger and fries to one of the waitresses.

“Nope,” she said, trying to grin back, although she could barely find the energy to sit up straight. The adrenaline rush she’d felt in the subway was gone now and exhaustion had hit her like a brick. “I’m here as a paying customer. Can I get a plate of fries and some ranch?”

Mike looked at her warily. She never came in if she didn’t have to work and he knew it. She knew it too and tried for a cheerful smile as he set the plate in front of her. She didn’t meet his gaze, shoving the fries around the plate as he went back to work.

“Is Lisa here tonight?” she asked, looking at him for a moment.

“I knew there was a reason you were here,” he said, nodding at her as he flipped another burger. “She’s over there. Got tables 15 to 20 tonight.”

Wearily, she pushed herself off of the stool and made her feet walk over to the opposite side of the restaurant. Lisa had just taken somebody’s order and was sticking the pencil back in her long blonde pony tail as she headed back to the kitchen. But she stopped dead in her tracks when she saw Rachel.

“It happened again, didn’t it?” she asked.

Rachel nodded.

“And you left him?”

More nodding.

“Oh, my God!”

The ear-shattering squeal that followed was accompanied by a bone-crushing hug, surprising in someone as petite as Lisa.

“Lees, let me go. I can’t breathe.”

From a safe distance, Rachel smiled at her friend, genuinely this time.

“I need a place to stay,” she said, watching in dismay as her friend behind to fidget, no longer meeting her eyes.

“Tonight?”

“Yes, tonight,” she answered. “Of course tonight. Where else am I going to stay?”

Lisa still wouldn’t quite meet Rachel’s eyes, but when she did look up, there were tears in them.

“I can’t tonight,” she said, swiping at her eyes. “Max has a fever. My mom won’t let anybody stay tonight.”

The clattering of plates and silverware filled the silence between them.

“You told me,” Rachel said, tears forming in her own eyes. “You said that any time I needed someplace to stay, I could come to you. You told me I should leave. You said, whenever I needed, your door was open.”

“Anytime,” Lisa said. “But not tonight.” She looked up again. “Tomorrow. You can stay for a while. I promise.”

She brushed a blonde strand back behind her ear and edged around her friend on her way to the kitchen.

Rachel stood there for a moment, trying to keep the tears in, before she forced her legs to move, to carry her back to the counter and pull herself back in front of the greasy plate of fries. And she pushed them around again as she contemplated her dilemma. Really, she didn’t have anyone else to go to. Nobody else knew about her dad or the way he treated her. And she didn’t want anybody else to know.

She was trying to remember where the nearest homeless shelter was, staring down at her fries, which were swiftly growing cold, when a hand crossed into her field of vision, picking up a fry. She looked up just in time to see Mike pop the fry into his mouth.

“I heard about your little problem,” he told her, chewing thoughtfully.

“Yeah?”

Her eyebrow quirked up. Mike had always been nice to her, but it had never been anything personal.

“Yeah,” he said, his bushy caterpillar eyebrows looked as though they were trying to touch each other. “And I think I might have a solution.”

“I am NOT staying at your place.” Her eyes flared a little in alarm. “I barely even know you.”

“You’re not staying at my place,” he said. “As though I would let you. But you can stay here.”

“Here?” she asked, looking around at the grungy diner. “Thanks for the offer, but booths don’t exactly make good mattresses.”

“I’ve got a cot set up in the back,” he told her. When both of her eyes brows rose into her dark hairline, he continued. “Sometimes the food vendors make really early deliveries and it’s easier to just spend the night here than to hike back from my apartment at three in the morning. The sheets are clean and everything.”

“Ok,” she nodded. “Thank you.”

She blushed a little, looking back down at her plate. Of all the sources that help could have come from, she hadn’t been expecting this one.

“I’m not just going to let you stay for free,” he said.

She cast a disgruntled look in his direction as he threw an apron at her.

“Dishwasher duty for the rest of the night,” he said, grinning.

Shoving her bags behind the counter, she rolled up her sleeves and prepared to plunge her arms in the soapy water. It was a small price to pay.

It was almost two in the morning before all of the dishes were washed and all of the tables had been wiped down. Mike waved at her through the glass of the door as he locked up and walked away. She had the place to herself, sitting on the cot in the back. It was eerily quiet, compared to what she was used to.

With a sigh, she remembered that she still had work to do. She pulled on an old t-shirt and a pair of cotton shorts to sleep in and sat on the bed, focusing a tiny book light on her old enemy, the biochem book.

She must have fallen asleep. The battery from her book light had burned out and her book was sprawled across her chest. The air was still murky-dark and the night was black except for what little light streetlights through the windows. But it wasn’t light that had woken her. It was noise. And she heard it again.

Someone was banging on the door to the diner.

Wednesday 24 November 2010

Untitled

Hey,

This is something that I started working on a while ago and have since then dropped and picked back up. It's a story that I hesitated to take on, just because it's something of a heavier topic and not the sort of thing I usually do. That's also why I'm not posting the whole thing on here. I'm just going to post the beginning (which is relatively uncontroversial as far as short story beginnings go) and maybe when I finish writing it, I'll post more of it.

- Lena

She was tired. She felt exhaustion in the marrow of her bones, weighing her down until her limbs were lead. She felt it in the pit of her stomach like a stone. It was only six o’clock and already she could feel her eyes beginning to slide closed, her head veering dangerously towards the window.

The little girl who sat across the bus aisle watched in fascination as the breath from Sara’s open, slightly snoring mouth began to fog up the window. It was cold outside, that Friday night in November, and the breath formed tiny crystals against the glass. It was still early but the sun was nothing more than a rosy glimmer on the horizon. The sky overhead was a deep, thunder-gray shot through with silver. There was snow in the forecast. The city would be coated in downy whiteness by morning and everyone was rushing home to spend the night tucked into blankets, ready to watch the tiny white flakes melt into darkness.

Sara didn’t care about any of that. She was just trying to get home. There were another four chapters of biochem to read before the exam next Wednesday and a paper due on Tuesday that she desperately needed to start researching.

And she had to get up early for work tomorrow. She was still in her waitressing uniform and the dark cotton was heavy with the scent of grease. She’d been serving up burgers and fries since class let out at ten, and she could smell the French fries in her hair.

Hopefully she could get some work done before her father got home. Hopefully, she thought, allowing her eyes to slide shut, he wouldn’t come home at all.

The bus jolted to a heavy stop, throwing all of the passengers forwards as the doors squeezed open. Mournfully, she dragged her eyes open, scooped up her things and pulled herself off of the bus, trudging three blocks to their apartment building.

The cold bit her face, turning her cheeks a fierce red and making her eyes water. She was grateful that it woke her up enough to get her home, but a jaw-cracking yawn hit her as soon as the keys were in the door.

She shed her coat as the warmth of the apartment hit her, dropping it on the couch. She wandered through the messy living room to the kitchen. There were clothes everywhere, scattered across the couch and piled on the floor. Empty food containers lined the coffee table and most of the counters in the kitchen, punctuated by empty bottles and water stains where other bottles had been. The dishes in the sink were stacked haphazardly, as though they were abandoned by a careless child.

She would wash the dishes later, she decided, as she slid a lean cuisine out of the freezer and into the microwave.

No other part of the mess belonged to her. She had promised herself that she wouldn’t clean up after him anymore, but she needed the dishes to eat off of, so she would wash them.

Sitting at the sticky dining room table, she picked through the edible parts of the microwaveable meal and drank a glass of water. She left the carton from the food on the table. He wouldn’t notice it anyway.

Shifting back into the living room, she dragged her heavy backpack with her onto the couch and pulled the biochem book onto her lap. It sat there like a stone for several moments before she opened it, trying to force her tired eyes to concentrate on the chemical makeup of the digestive tract, but it was no good. The colors wavered before her eyes, the words blurring and becoming incomprehensible.

Maybe, she thought, as she closed the book and put it back into her bag, if she just closed her eyes for fifteen or twenty minutes, she would be able to concentrate. Maybe, she thought as she yawned and lay back against the pillows of the smelly old couch. Her eyes focused on the clock on the VCR. It was 6:40. If she just slept till 7, she’d still be able to get everything done just fine.

She woke up the sound of breaking glass. Jumping up in the darkness, her bleary eyes could just make out a beer bottle smashed against the far wall of the living room, right next to the kitchen.

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Sisters

Hello,

This is part of a continuing story that I hope to turn into something like a novel. I'm not sure if this piece can stand on its own, but I do like the dialogue that goes on here. I've skipped a bit between the last portion I posted and this piece. If you've read anything from this piece before, then you'll recognize the characters. I've never been particularly good at making believable dialogue, so I can use all of the practice I can get. Hope you like it.

- Lena

I left Tia standing by the doorway and started putting away the breakfast things again.

But the silence didn’t last long.

“Just tell me why,” she said, turning around to glare at me.

“Why what?”

“Why don’t you like him?” she asked.

“I like him plenty,” I told her, beginning to rinse the breakfast plates in one of the buckets of well-water.

“Then why are you so mean to him?” She plopped back into her seat. I could feel her eyes boring into my back. “You could do a lot worse than Jorie, you know.”

“I know.” I answered through gritted teeth. “I just don’t want him to get the wrong idea.”

“Which idea would that be?”

I stayed silent, scrubbing the dishes extra hard. She took this as an opportunity.

“He’s good-looking, you know,” she said. “I know you’ve seen how the other girls look at him. And he’s only a year away from becoming a journeyman. You know that old Mr. Smithers is going to sell him the shop.”

“I know.”

She heard the anger building in my voice, but that didn’t stop her.

“Don’t you want someone to spend your life with? Someone to take care of you? Father’s not going to be around forever.” She brushed her hair back with one hand and words continued to rush out of her mouth. “Obviously, you can stay with Thomas and me. Is that the life you want?”

“I want to be free.”

The words were out of my mouth before I could stop them. I wasn’t looking at her, but I could hear her cheeks turning bright red as her voice rose another octave.

“You want to be free?” She snorted. “Who’s going to take care of you while you’re being free? Who’s going to feed you?”

I didn’t want her to see the tears that were streaming down my face. And I couldn’t think of anything to say to her. I couldn’t stop from stomping a little as I crossed the kitchen, grabbing the large woven basket that sat by the door. Balancing it on one hip, I practically ran out the doorway and into what was now bright sunshine.

I could hear her calling and shouting behind me, but I didn’t turn around. The laundry needed to be done, I told myself. I could face her later.

I crossed the field, going in the direction opposite the one the men had gone. The woods had always been welcoming when I was a little girl. Now the cool green light between the trees felt like coming home. I stopped just inside the line of trees and took a deep breath, feeling the cool air on my burning cheeks.

I set the basket on the ground and stopped to strip off my shoes before going on. Walking through the light-dappled darkness, with the cool dirt under my feet, I let myself release the thoughts that I had pushed into the corners of my mind.

Wednesday 17 November 2010

Beginnings

This is actually planned as a prologue to what I hope will be a novel (I know that's not really grammatically correct, but hopefully it makes sense). I only just wrote it, but I still think it's cute and hopefully you will too. The themes in it very obviously lead to something I've written/posted in the past. Again, just wrote it, so it's still very unedited and quite raw. I hope you like it.

- Lena

She burst out of the forest, running with all of her might, to crash-land on the long, soft grass of the field. Right on her tracks, he sprinted out of the trees, almost tripping over her, but managing instead to land next to her.

“I won,” she huffed, still not quite having caught her breath.

She tucked her skirts in around her and wiggled her toes in the cool green grass. It wouldn’t be green much longer. The August days were still hot, but the sun was setting behind the trees and the two children were aware of the Autumn coming soon, in the same way you can hear a fly buzzing around your head. You know it’s there, but you can’t catch it. And you can’t stop the seasons from changing.

He glared at her.

“That’s not fair. You cheated.”

“I did not.” She glared back at him. “It’s not my fault you tripped.”

He wisely chose to remain silent on this count.

“Father told me that the carpenter is looking for an apprentice,” he said coolly.

She looked at him, but stayed silent.

“I'm going to see him tomorrow,” he continued. “I’m fairly certain I’ll get it. Father’s good friends with him. And I’ve always been good at mending things.”

“That’s nice.” Her voice was quiet and he could barely hear it, even in the silence.

“Maybe in a few years, I’ll be ready to start my own shop,” he said.

“That’s wonderful,” she told him. “I wish I could do that.”

“But you’re a girl.”

She stayed quiet, angrily ignoring his words.

“It’s going to be dark soon,” he said. “You want me to walk you home?”

“I want to stay out here a while,” she said, staring up into the sky above the forest. “I like watching the sun set over there. It’s like the sky is melting.”

“I don’t know,” he said quietly. “I don’t think you should be out this late.”

She puffed up a little at the tone of his voice.

“Why shouldn’t I stay out this late? You do it all the time!”

“I’m a boy!”

He didn’t elaborate, feeling that this explanation should be sufficient.

“So what? I’m a girl.”

“No,” he said, blushing a little as he looked at her. “You’re a lady.”

“Am not.” She punched him in the arm. “Take that back.”

“You will be soon,” he muttered, nursing his bruised arm. “And it’s not right for a lady to be out late on her own.”

“Lady or not,” she told him. “I’ll do what I want. And you can’t stop me.”

They sat in silence as the sun finished its journey across the sky in a flaming display of purple, red and gold. Velvety darkness swiftly replaced the dying light.

Grudgingly, she pushed herself up off the ground and brushed the stray bits of dirt and grass from her skirt. She offered a hand to help pull him up and against his better judgment he accepted it.

He brushed himself off and looked up at her, suddenly aware of her appraising gaze.

He was trying to think of something to say, but we will never know what that was going to be, because at that moment she darted forward to plant a quick kiss on his lips.

His cheeks burned bright red in the darkness.

“What did you do that for?”

“Because I can.”

She smiled at him. Before he could think of what to say to that, she was already halfway across the field that led to her home. The farmhouse’s lights were burning bright and warm. She was through the door before he could convince his feet to move.

He stood in the darkness, breathing in the cool scents of pine that drifted from the woods and gazing up at the lights of her house.

“Someday, I’m going to marry that girl,” he whispered.

Monday 1 November 2010

Dia de los Muertos

She knew something was wrong as soon as she walked in the door. Sara could hear music and noise as she walked up to the house, but only when she opened the door and stepped inside did she realize what was going on.

If the music hadn’t given it away, the table would have. The bright red patterned table cloth screamed its presence in the otherwise sedate décor and the sugar skulls caught the light from the many taper candles surround them. It was November 2nd, she remembered belatedly, as she dropped her bag on the floor next to the door and crossed the living room to the dining room.

Dropping into a chair, she ran a hand along the table cloth, feeling its’ rough weave against her fingers and popped a brightly colored piece of candy into her mouth. Bowls of it sat along the table.

“Don’t eat those,” her mother called. “They’re not for you.”

She was mixing something in the kitchen, baking something, Sara thought, as she saw the smudges of flour on her mother’s face. She’d even managed to get some in her hair and it was stark against the dark brown.

“I can’t believe you’re doing this again, Ma,” she said, discreetly taking another piece of candy. “What’s the point?”

“The point is, Mija, to honor those who have passed,” her mother told her, yet again, as she swayed to the music streaming from the boombox in the corner. “It’s the Dia de los Muertos, honey.”

“I know, I know. It just seems like such a silly tradition.”

“What’s silly about it?” Her mother swatted her lightly on the head as she passed by. “Your grandmother passed away this year. You don’t want to honor her memory?”

“That’s not fair.” She looked angrily up at her mother. “You know I loved Grandma. You know I miss her.”

Images of Grandmother flashed through her mind. She always so dignified. Sara couldn’t remember a time when her grandmother hadn’t stood tall at the head of the table. And when Sara needed advice, she had always been there with a kind word. Photographs of Grandmother sat on the table. Sara took one in her hand and touched her grandmother’s face through the cold glass. She couldn’t imagine how her beautiful, strong Grandmother had produced the short, loud, disorganized woman who had grown up to be her mother.

“Then I don’t see why you wouldn’t want to do this for her,” she said, spooning batter into a pan.

Sara sat quiet for a minute.

“You don’t really think that the souls of the dead walk the earth on the Day of the Dead, do you?” she asked her mother.

“I don’t know, Mija,” she answered, with more honesty than Sara had hope for. “Maybe they do and maybe they don’t. But if they do, I’m sure they appreciate our efforts. I know what it’s like to come home to an empty house.”

Sara went to bed early that night. She could still hear laughter and the clinking of glasses as she brushed her teeth and pulled on her pajamas. She had told them it was because she had to be in school early tomorrow, but really it was because she couldn’t stand the sight of it anymore. It was garish, she thought. It was gaudy. It wouldn’t bring honor to anybody, much less her beautiful grandmother.

Closing her eyes tight, she tried to sleep, but the din from downstairs banged in her ears and it was a long time before sleep found her.

When she woke up, the first thing she noticed was that clearly, it was not morning. The moonlight still poured through the window. She blinked through her sleepiness as she became aware of what had awoken her. The crunching sound seemed to fill her room. Pushing back the covers, she sat up in bed and rubbed her eyes, still listening to that mysterious crunching noise.

“Well, it’s about time.”

The voice came from across the room… and it was a familiar one. But it couldn’t be, she told herself, as she rubbed her eyes again and focused on the person seated at the chair by her desk.

But it was…

“Grandmother?” she whispered.

“Yes, sweetheart.” The old woman’s white teeth shone in the darkness. “I’m here.”

She popped another chip in her mouth from the bowl that was sitting in her lap.

“By the way, you sleep like a log. It took forever to wake you up.”

“But you’re…. you’re…”

“Dead? Of course I am.”

She sat up and pulled the covers up to her chest.

“How is this possible?” she whispered.

“You’ve forgotten that it’s the Day of the Dead, haven’t you?” Grandmother shook her head. “Your mother certainly didn’t. I’m so glad she left me all of those snacks and sweets. It’s a long trip you know.”

“Yeah,” she said. “I guess Mom was right for once.”

“That’s exactly what I’ve come to talk to you about,” her grandmother told her, waving a chip for emphasis.

“What? Chips?”

“No.” She could feel her Grandmother’s dark eyes bore into her, even in the darkness. “About your mother. And you know it.”

“What about my mother? She’s fine.” She crossed her arms over her chest.

“She’s fine, but you’re not. You need to start respecting her, Mija.”

Sara’s face scrunched up.

“I respect her plenty.”

“No, you don’t.” Another chip flew into the old woman’s mouth. “She is your mother, Mija. She does everything for you. She deserves respect.”

“She’s just so… different.”

This elicited a laugh and Sara got another glimpse of those white teeth, like tiny pearls.

“She’s not as different as you think,” she said. “She’s not as different from me as you think and certainly not as much as she thinks.”

Sara scoffed, with a quiet humph.

“She loves you. And you’re not so different from her. You love her too, sweetheart,” her Grandmother told her. “You just need to remember it more often.”

“So you came here, all the way from the Great Beyond, just to tell me to be nicer to my mother?”

“Something like that.”

Her grandmother set aside the bowl of chips and rose from her seat by the door. Step by step, she came towards the bed and that familiar old face became clearer in the moonlight.

“I also came to tell you that I love you,” she said. “And that I miss you and your mother.”

“I miss you too, Grandmother.”

Tears sprang from Sara’s eyes, rolling slowly down her cheeks.

“I love you so much,” she said, looking up into her grandmother’s face for the last time.

The old woman wiped away her granddaughter’s tears for the last time, tucking a strand of hair back behind her granddaughter’s ear and touching her cheek.

“I have to go now,” she said solemnly and Sara could see the tears running down her Grandmother’s cheek. “It’s almost midnight and it’s a long journey.”

Sara wanted to say goodbye and the word was on her lips, but she blinked and found herself all alone in the darkness of her bedroom. She stared into the darkness for a long time, hearing her grandmother’s voice echo in her head. Soon, however, the darkness turned grey and as her eyes slid shut there was a smile on her face.

Saturday 30 October 2010

Time

I have a bottle full of time.

I guard it with much care.

People see it and they scoff.

They say it’s full of air.


I have a bottle full of time.

I keep it hid away.

But no matter where I keep it,

my bottle will not stay.


I’ll put it in my dresser

and find it under the bed.

I’ll go looking for ketchup

and find my time instead.


My little bottle taunts me

Sitting sparkly in my hand

“Drink me,” it cries, “Use me.”

as my life drifts by like sand.


I have time in a bottle.

And I’ll save it for a day

when all my dreams have come true

and time still will not stay.


I have time in a bottle.

I hold on to it tight.

I know I’ll use it someday.

But that won’t be tonight.

Thursday 28 October 2010

In the old stone chapel...

Hello,

I've just finished this one, so you'll excuse if it's a little unpolished. I started it a few days ago and you can consider this post my tribute to the Halloween spirit. I hope you like it.

- Lena

“This chapel was built after the castle was already in existence, but don’t worry guys, it’s still quite old. It dates from the early 14th century.”

The pretty blonde tour guide walked backward down the aisle. She smiled and gestured to the stained glass windows on either side, before continuing her speech. She spoke with a Scottish burr and it felt like she was always laughing.

“The stained glass is genuine, from the time the chapel was built. Many family members are buried right under these flagstones. Despite the many funerals this chapel has seen, there has yet to be even one wedding, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles, I suppose. You’ll notice that this chapel is considerably colder than the rest of the castle. That’s because, as beautiful as those windows are, they’re not very well insulated. You see, medieval architects didn’t exactly have access to modern heating. But if you’ll follow me through this archway into the main castle and I’ll show you the bedrooms.”

The rest of her classmates filed out behind the guide, sneakers clomping and echoing against the heavy stone, but she couldn’t seem to move. She could catch up to them later, Anna reasoned, but her feet felt rooted in place as she gazed up at the stained glass windows. It was a cloudy day but they glowed in the half-light, casting reds and blues and shimmery whites across the deep gray paving stones.

No one noticed as she hung behind. Anna was surprised that no one had ever been married here. The windows cast such a sense of peace in the cool stone space. It would be a beautiful place to start a life with someone, she thought. She gazed reverently at the windows. Surprisingly, they were quite secular. There were crosses interspersed there, but for the most part, they portrayed abstract designs. She saw animals, suns, stars and moons, shining out from the windows as though someone had taken the celestial objects down from the sky.

“Beautiful, aren’t they?”

She jumped and turned around at the voice. She had been alone in the chapel, she thought, her cheeks burning a brilliant crimson at getting caught staring. The old woman sat on one of the wooden pews, looking at her with a clear, blue-eyed gaze.

“Yes, they’re lovely,” she said. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything quite like them.”

“There’s nothing like them in all the world,” the old woman spoke softly, almost whispering to herself. Like the tour guide, she had a Scottish burr, although hers was much more pronounced.

“I’m glad I got to see them.” It was really awkward, trying to keep up a conversation with a complete stranger.

“I come to see them every day,” the old woman said.

She was wearing an old-fashioned black dress and wrapped in a thin black shawl. Must be a local, Anna thought.

“Wow, that must be quite an effort,” she said. “I mean, walking all the way up from the village every day.”

“I live here,” the old woman answered.

“I didn’t know that anyone still lived in the castle,” Anna said.

“It’s hard to leave your home,” the old woman’s voice was quiet, but Anna understood every word. “I’ll never leave the place where I grew up.”

Anna smiled.

“That’s part of why I’m here,” she said, smiling across the aisle at the woman. “I left home because I wanted to see the world, see new things and learn about them.”

The old woman’s eyes raked her up and down. She shuddered a little under that gaze, but it might have just been a breeze in that drafty chapel.

“You remind me of my daughter,” she said. “She left home, left me, but she never came back.”

“I’m sorry,” Anna told her. “I didn’t mean to dredge up bad memories.”

“When you’re my age, darling, all you’ve got left is memories.”

The old woman stared into space for a moment before looking back at Anna.

“Come here, child,” she said, beckoning with an old thin hand.

Anna walked hesitantly over and forced herself not to shiver as the old woman ran a hand over her hair.

“You have such lovely, dark hair,” she said, gazing off into space again before snapping back into the present and looking into her eyes.

“I would like to give you something,” she told the young woman.

“You really don’t have to do that,” Anna answered, and started to back away, as the old woman grabbed her hand.

“I want to,” she said. “I would like to give you something to remember this place by. You should remember that somewhere, your mother is waiting for you to return, that she will be waiting, no matter how far you go.”

The old woman reached deep into a pocket of her dress and pulled out a beautiful gold locket. It was circular in shape and it glowed in the half-darkness of the chapel.

“Take this,” she said, dropping the locket into Anna’s palm. “And remember.”

The girl’s hand closed over the locket almost against her will. She could feel the cool metal pressed inside her fist when the woman spoke again.

“You should catch up to your group now, Darling,” she said. “You wouldn’t want them to forget you in here. Run along.”

“Good-bye, Ma’am,” Anna answered, as her feet carried her up the aisle and out the door at the rear of the church. Honestly, she was quite happy to get out of that drafty chapel and away from the strange old woman.

Her feet stumbled over the lintel in the doorway and she looked back as she tripped, barely bracing herself against the firm stone of the arch. There was no one in the chapel behind her.

Maybe she’d imagined the encounter, she thought, as she ran along the hall to catch up with her group. No, she couldn’t have. She could feel the locket firm and real inside her hand. The old woman must have walked out of the chapel while she was going up the aisle. Yes, she was certain. That must be what happened.

Her shoes slapped loudly against the stone. The blood pounded in her ears. By the time she caught up with the group in the large, airy chamber that the hallway emptied into, she could barely hear the tour guide over the sound of her own heartbeat. She’d missed half of the lecture, but she gathered that the room had been used as a grand dining hall, primarily when the family had important guests, but she could’ve figured that out on her own, judging by the enormous, heavy wooden table filling the center of the space. The chamber was quite gloomy and the windows were small for such a large space, presumably built that way to keep enemy arrows out. Enormous chandeliers hung from the ceiling and she imagined they would have given the room a nice glow, but they weren’t lit.

While she looked, the guide continued speaking.

“If you gents and ladies will take a look round at the walls, you will see portraits of all the members of the family, down through the ages. Some of these date from the 1200’s.” She smiled at the group, making sure she still had their attention. “To be sure, they weren’t a particularly attractive lot, but the paintings do give us an insight into the long and complex history of the castle. We also host parties in this room, for a handsome fee. Quite a few brides have gotten upset when the paintings didn’t match their wedding themes, but such is life. Feel free to have a look around and the tour will resume in ten minutes.”

She caught her breath as the others wandered around the room in small clumps. Some pulled out cameras and avidly began snapping photos, while some plopped down on the uncomfortable wooden chairs and sipped from water bottles, discreetly munching away at whatever chips they had stashed in their bags, for all snacks weren’t allowed on the tour.

The tour guide wandered over to a corner and drank from her own water bottle, chugging quite energetically. Anna followed, trying not to look too eager. She didn’t know quite how to ask her question without sounding odd.

“So,” she said, gaining the girl’s attention. “These tours must make it really difficult for the people who live around here.”

The tour guide screwed the top back on the bottle and sat it on a side table.

“The villagers?” she asked, looking up at Anna. “They really don’t mind. After all, the tours bring in money. And a village so tiny can always use a little extra income. And the tourists really aren’t so bad.”

She smiled, inviting Anna to laugh at her small joke, but Anna merely looked perplexed.

“I didn’t mean the villagers,” she answered. “ I mean the people who live here. You know, in the castle.”

Now the tour guide looked slightly confused.

“No one lives here,” she said. “The castle is a historical place and it’s protected by the government. It’s not a residence. Who would want to live someplace without heat or running water anyway?”

“Oh. I guess I hadn’t thought about that.” She knew she sounded like an idiot, but she didn’t know what else to say. “Of course no one lives here.”

The tour guide turned back to her backpack and surreptitiously pulled out a cookie, as Anna slowly backed away, hoping to pretend the conversation had never happened.

She uncurled the fingers of her right hand. The locket was still there, but it wasn’t the golden shimmery piece she had seen before. A locket that had turned brown with age hung from a rusted chain, sitting neatly in her palm. Quickly, she shut her hand again, backing further away. If she’d been looking where she was going, it might not have happened. She might not have bumped into the side table, nearly knocking it over, but she did.

It rocked on its’ four, spindly carved legs, seconds away from falling over, but she managed to catch it, only to receive a glare from the tour guide.

“Most of the furnishings here are authentic, you know. It wouldn’t hurt you to be a little more careful.” The blond girl glared at her to emphasize the point and took a large bite of cookie.

Anna averted her gaze quickly, making sure the table was steady again and found her gaze caught in the painting on the wall behind it. It was an old woman wearing a voluminous black dress. The painting was well done. The viewer could clearly see everything from the intricate lace on the woman’s shawl to the steely blue gaze of her eyes. Her skin was wrinkled and her grey hair piled in an elegant bun on top of her head. She was undoubtedly old, but sat with a self-possession and control that belied her age. And she was absolutely, without a doubt, the woman Anna had spoken to in the chapel.

“Who is she?” Anna nodded toward the painting. To her surprise, the tour guide smiled.

“She’s an interesting story.” The blonde young woman gazed up at the portrait reverently. “Her mother was the duchess of Windsor, who was, unfortunately, none too fond of her daughter. She came here when she sixteen, married off to some man she hardly knew and stuck in a big, drafty castle. But she ran this place like a queen. She’s the one who commissioned the stained glass in the chapel. She made this castle her legacy, despite a philandering husband and a sick son. She put all of her faith in her daughter. She raised that girl like a princess, gave her the run of the place, always said that someday, this castle would be hers.”

“What happened?”

“It’s a sad ending,” the guide said, looking from the painting back to Anna. “Her daughter hated this place, insisted on moving back to London. And she stayed there, until she died, which wasn’t actually very long. Caught some disease and died young. Broke her mother’s heart. But she kept running this place, even after her son and husband died. After she finally passed the castle was untenanted for a long time, until some cousins picked it up.”

Anna gazed up at the portrait for a moment, before turning back to her guide.

“You know,” she said. “You never mentioned her name.”

The tour guide looked up from what was currently her third cookie.

“Her name was Anna,” she said, through a mouthful of crumbs.

The tour guide didn’t hear Anna’s sharp intake of breath and it didn’t really matter, as she trotted off to use the toilet before the tour started up again.

Anna stared at the portrait and then at the locket in her hand. She looked back at the portrait again.

Later she would pretend that she hadn’t seen it, that the portrait was just a picture of an old woman with a shawl, sitting dourly in a plush chair. And she would never admit it, but it was nonetheless true. At that particular moment, gazing up at that portrait, Anna watched as the old woman gave her a wink and a smile.