Catharsis

Tears spilt from the pages of this new story. It was a sad saga of a broken love affair. Stretching across three decades it ended in unconscionable pain. It was a story everyone knew, but it was a different way of telling it.

I had ached with the writing of it. Every keystroke was a body blow. By the time I’d entered the last word, I was curled in on myself by the weight of it. My eyes were ringed in black shadow from the sleepless nights spent fighting the demons of this story. 

The few friends I had managed to keep through this process said it was my best effort, but the cost was too high. They said I looked dead. If only they knew how I felt. 

It had taken me nine months to write it, and came in now at just over 500 pages; almost too long, but there was so much that needed to be captured, so much needing to be said.

I didn’t write every day of the nine months. Many days the weight of the telling wouldn’t allow it. Then one day the characters’ scratching at my brain, demanding their story be told, would become too much. In a furious effort, I would scorch the screen with 10,000 words a day, sleeping for an hour or two before snapping awake with the urgent need to capture the fragment of whatever I had been dreaming.

It would take a week or two to recover from these bouts, and then I’d start in again as the characters clawed at my brain for release. 

The way I work, when I re-write, if I have the courage, I must have a printed copy of the pages to work from. Reading my own words is such a torture. I need something physical upon which to take out the frustration at my poor sentence structures, tangential asides, and awful word choices. I eviscerate those pages.

Because of the self-flagellation involved, my re-writes are few and far between. This piece would never have been touched again but for the encouragement of the few remaining friends I’ve allowed to read it. Their praise led me to believe I had to take it on again.

And so now I sit with my tears staining the pages. I know the truth of these words. I know they will never see publication beyond the viewing of those friends. They are too true. There is too much pain. They are the best words I have written because of the truth and the pain.

That is what my words do, cause pain. Those few that have found their way to publication have led to angry words from my past from those who think they were inspiration for the hurt the words hold. They never cared to understand the demons that haunt my days.

Still, there is hurt in my words. Because of this, I will keep them confined to these tear-stained pages, hoping the catharsis will come with their having escaped from my mind.

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Fury

The old man stood on his porch at the top of Sewell Hill and prepared to witness the end of the world. The clouds were forming up to the west. Huge black thunderheads stretched as far as the eye could see; filled with ominous intent.

He’s joints ached. In particular, his hands – the tools of his life – throbbed with the violence waiting to be unleashed.

He felt calm. His ice blue eyes didn’t betray any fear because he didn’t feel any. The storms were worse every year, but there was nothing for it but to ride them out. The river had never risen to the height of his house, he didn’t figure it would start now.

A jagged blue-white fork of lightning erupted from the blackness in the distance. He waited, counting the seconds, until he heard the low rumble of thunder. A light scream filled the air as it faded. Still some time. He stood and went back inside.

He walked through each room verifying the windows were open. The wraparound porch would protect him from water entering, but it was the cool air the storm promised that concerned him. 

He passed the small room off the kitchen where he wrote. That window was shut. No water would get in, but he refused to take the risk, ever.

Entering the kitchen he walked over to the kettle and took it off the burner putting an end to its screaming. He poured himself a cup of tea and took it with him back to the front porch. His knees popped as he sat back in his chair.

The clouds were moving faster now. He could see the sheets of rain moving with them. He thought about how fortunate he was to have the porch. Had there ever been a summer as hot as this one? The news said ‘no,’ and his bones had been telling him the same thing for two days. 

The air crackled with electricity. He could see the rain passing through the town. In an instant it was upon him. It landed with a great clap of thunder followed by a desperate drumbeat upon the porch roof.

He imagined the rest of the town in a panic, rushing to close windows or get where they were going, out of the rain. He sipped his tea and watched the fury of Mother Nature unfold before his eyes. 

The signs had all been there. Why hadn’t they done more to prepare?

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Faded Beauty

Her face was pinched with exhaustion as she slumped into her seat on the train and leaned her head against the side of the car. Her eyes closed for a moment and her head nodded forward, before snapping back into alertness. 

There was a faded beauty at the edges of that face, fighting to hang on. The red hair was faded and the blue eyes didn’t hold the normal Irish ice color from being set against ivory skin. Now they leant more towards the gray storm clouds of endless cares.

Hers was a face beaten down by a succession of menial jobs taken to eke out a living as opposed to work that might get her ahead. She never advanced as the inevitable always happened: some lonely customer would come in and make a pass at her and she’d tell him where he could stick his ideas about love. She’d be fired in an instant, management choosing the brand as opposed to the rights of a $10-an-hour cashier.

She twitched in her seat. Jittery. She’d never once stuck a needle in her arm or anything up her nose. She wasn’t one of those. Right now though, she was desperate for a cigarette to ease the tension in her mind. Her hands bounced in her lap, and she thought of reaching into her bag for the pack she knew was there. She shifted in her seat. Her hands went to her hair. They went back to her lap. She crossed her legs then uncrossed them. She went into her bag and pulled out a cigarette. Holding it in her clenched fist, she felt calm.

There was a heaviness to the sadness in her eyes as she looked to the ceiling of the train. She didn’t know if she believed anymore. The years since she’d arrived in the “land of opportunity” had soured her on faith, but still she raised tired eyes in the direction of heaven and asked god if this was what he’d intended.

She wasn’t surprised there was no answer. She slumped in the seat and moved the cigarette to her lips. Her hands twitched around her lighter. The train rattled along and she stared toward the familiar nothingness out the window, waiting for it to be over.

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