meet me on the far side (cass)
Mar 4, 2013 16:55:13 GMT -5
Post by Mary on Mar 4, 2013 16:55:13 GMT -5
[atrb=border,0,true][atrb=cellSpacing,0,true][atrb=cellPadding,0,true][atrb=style, background-color: 191919; border: 0; width: 500px; padding: 0 0 0 0px;] Here I stand, helpless and left for dead Close your eyes, so many days go by Easy to find what's wrong Harder to find what's right Snow carpets my feet and thoughts go farther than the loaf of bread that is clutched between my hands with an unfathomable tightness. I can feel the slight warmth seeping into my raw fingers, even the little bit of it feels amazing against the white snow that rains down around me. Mum always said I was a winter's child. It is only now though that I sometimes doubt her words, the winter is a death sentence, and to her, I was the embodied version of winter. Does that mean I am a ruthless killer with not a soul to be seen? I'm not quite sure; I just don't think that mum ever really thought about her words before they came out. And home reminds me of her, of Lily and the once beautiful house that once stood where only a pile of sticks rests on its deathbed now. Laughter used to echo through small two-roomed house, each smile reflecting on every person. We were all a big and happy family, even when the winter came to break spirits and murder every last dream. I do promise though, the cold will never take something as precious as dignity from me. I pray to the lord it won’t, and that's the best I can do. I don't want to say at home, I don't want to sit and slowly eat the bread as memories sink into my skin and infect my mind, dreams pouring into the front of my brain that I swore would be thrown away. I'm not all that sure I want to leave my sopping boots by the door either; a part of me likes the numbness that takes over as I trudge through the snow. Who's here to tell me I'm tracking water anyways? Who cares? Mum sure doesn't? As a child she would scold me for playing in mud and then leaving it in my wake, or jumping in puddles and walking in without a care as to taking my boots off. Now though, I could have as dirty a floor as I wanted, and mum could do nothing about it, no matter how much she wanted to. I'm out the door as soon as I enter, bread positioned under blankets as to make sure it's not completely frozen by the time I return, supper would be nice to have tonight I suppose. Going all night on an empty stomach can be awful, I learned that quickly. Survival is the key to it all now. Sometimes, I wish I could be an animal; I would just go away and never come back. I guess walking does the same thing for me, running under the sun and in alleyways as only my silhouette appears on the drab walls surrounding me. I move fast like a bird. Of course, you can't survive without being swift and agile. I've picked that up along the way as well, the streets are sometimes quite helpful; they leak secrets and drown you in it. The night is a shade of blue, darkness surrounded by the dim streetlights that the peacekeepers never bother to improve. And my voice is just a small sound in the air as I call out into the wind, I need a friend. "Savoy, are you here?" |
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