I know a crossroads [Mercury series]
Jun 5, 2016 11:11:13 GMT -5
Post by kousei ♚ on Jun 5, 2016 11:11:13 GMT -5
M e r c u r y
My mother branded the notion of crossroads and decisions into me from my waking moment. Her morals of masculinity conflicted so greatly with my father's but her's seemed to take a deeper root.
If what I've heard is true, Jordan Scoff-Reye was a poor follower of my mother's morals of masculinity. A follower of the reckless things, he spent his life (and last moments included) filled with rage and violence. Mother didn't approve, I can tell by the way her nose wrinkles when he's mentioned. I don't hope or pray -I never could quite find the belief- but I hope I don't spend the rest of my days as Jordan Scoff-Reye (apparently) did.
Mother's morals to masculinity came with key instructions and ways of life. One of the key instructions came to facing crossroads and living with your decision with no complaint.
Another one included keeping your promises you made like a true man should.
I don't need to be told anything to know that both Mantel and Jordan Scoff failed in that regard. Promises for hope, promises for vengeance were both empty in the end.
Faced with the daily crossroad, I made my decision and now I'm drowning with no complaints.
Every footstep is a stumble through the grass, the neck of the bottle clasped between my sweaty palm attached to an arm hung limp at my side. The weight of my choice is worth a thousand tonnes - unbearable to be exact. Eyes wild, darting left and right, up and down until I give myself the mental all-clear. I swear with every step I sink deeper and deeper. After all, it's quite difficult to stay afloat when you're worth a physical tonne but contribute absolutely shit all. Still, even when drowning, relief tastes bitter sweet as the shadow of my house shrinks with every step forward and every meter I sink.
That's the consequence of being given a choice; you make a decision and you drown. Relief can never be quite pure, the hint of the bitterness will forever linger like the clouds of two dead boys hung above my head. No matter how deep I allow myself to sink the cloud can never fade. Death by drowning is a typical of a Scoff anyway. It's not easy. The number one requirement to dying with the name Scoff - it's not allowed to be a peaceful passing.
Sat down at the daily crossroads, I knew I would be forced to make a choice at one point or another. The allure of the liquor cabinet was strong, it was worth drowning for. I passed over one (too small), passed over another (half full) and another (tastes like shit) and with a morbid glee I found the golden brown I was looking for. If I'm going to drown I will drown with a smile on my face.
Every footstep's a stumble and every meter crossed is another meter down under. My eyes stay locked onto the ground, watching it slowly drift from under me. Today is as good as any to drown. Golden sunlight weeps from the sky, clouds remain hidden from sight and the air has a purity that not even a white angel has the hope of reaching. I'm going to drown today, at least it'll be with a smile on my face.
('I want you to promise me.')
People that makes promises are stupid. But people who break promises drown.
"Mercury Scoff!"
Mother's voice booms down the stairs at such a volume that I almost drop everything I'm doing. I tense at the sound of my own name being called down the stairs. I tense further at the sounds of stairs creaking and footsteps getting closer. My eyes stay locked onto the wall because I could never face my problems - already I've broken one of my mother's rules of masculinity branded into my head at my awakening.
"Look at me when I'm talking to you!" Her hot command burns, searing her broken rules of what is it to be a man shut. I force myself to turn; facing your problems like a man.
"Yes?" I ask, looking her straight in the eyes and resisting the urge to allow a shiver to crawl down my back. I feel myself getting warmer for ever second I spend looking into those eyes. I inherited those eyes but I cannot make my gaze burn hotter than a supernova itself - mine are too hollow.
"You were out yesterday, drinking," it's not a question of a speculation, it's a fact, "and you said you wouldn't." She finishes, scowling.
Her fire is only met with ice silence but already it begins to melt between us.
"Why?" She asks and the silence evaporates.
"I have to, you know I've got to." I respond but she won't have it.
"So you can be like your father? Do you want to waste away?! Her sudden eruption strikes me like a whip and I'm speechless. I don't know how I managed to will my neck to move so I could shake my head. After all, the sinew and muscles feel like ash underneath the fiery gaze.
"Oh, Merc," she says before pulling my into an embrace, as if the blaze of a protective mother can be snuffed out by a shocked expression.
"I-I-" fire has my tongue in an unbreakable death grip.
"Promise me, promise me you won't do it again." She says, putting me back at arms length.
"I just-" She cuts me off massively.
"I want you to promise me." She looks almost on the verge of tears, it's a wonder how eyes of such heat can produce tears.
In that moment we're both as weightless as air. The morals of masculinity that conflict with my father are in the front of my brain - slowly edging their way to the tip of my tongue. I can recite such words like the back of my hand.
Don't hit women.
Make your decisions and stick with them.
Keep your promises like a true man should.
Despite the conflicting morals of masculinity resting upon my shoulders, I feel as weightless as air itself. My mother's morals fall off the edge of my tongue in a single ice cold sentence. "I promise."
It doesn't melt in the heat.
You cannot heal burn scars, people wear them like armour but I choose to ignore mine. My mother's hot headed gaze burns into the back of my head deeper than the heat from the sun's light from above. With a soft sigh I step and allow myself to drop, planting my back against the tree. I've never prayed or hoped for much - I never could find the belief. Still, there's the silent hope that this tree can protect me from the storm that comes with two dead boys who I never remembered. I unscrew the bottle cap and wince. I swear, I can hear the a crackling of flames and the charred scent of my mother's morals hangs in the air with the noise.
Keep your promises like a true man should.
A rule of my mother's morals of masculinity finds it's way into fire and feeds my flames. I press the bottle to my lips and let it pour down my throat.
It burns and tastes like ashes.
Morals never tasted great, even when thrown into my self-destructing fire. If following my mother's morals of masculinity means living out the rest of my days with the false hopes of Jordan and Mantel Scoff then I would rather die a sinner with a broken moral compass. I told myself the bottle was my escape route but I don't think I'll ever truly protect myself from the storm of the two dead boys who evade my memories.
When I feel myself begin to blur I drown without a smile.
The ashes of keeping my promises taste bitter, but escape from the forgotten has to be better than living by branded morals.