Monday, April 13, 2015

What We Take With Us


I wonder if she knows she had mountains behind her. 

She’s always had mountains behind her. 

But you wouldn’t know it looking at her. Not at first at least. She maneuvered through life as though she were walking up mountains instead- bracing the wind or trudging through snow.  I’m certain she can’t help it, you know?  It’s just the best she’s ever been able to do.

She’s always had to really muster up the strength to do most anything. By the time she finished one thing, she’d be too tired for whatever came next.  I noticed this when we were young.  Shifting positions, talking, and writing. It all took such effort. Walking quite literally took the air out of her.  When she would arrive at her destination, she would slump into her chair or against the wall and close her eyes.  She would breathe in and breathe out, slowly and rhythmically.  Watching her made me ache.  Her frailness, a thin stature that seemed incapable of withholding everything she had been through. It always seemed like too much for her. I remember thinking this the first time I saw her. I remember that day like it was just yesterday. We were 6. She had to bend down to hoist up her socks.  They were striped every color of the rainbow.  Socks are sold one size fits all, but she was far from all. I would often wade behind her, waiting for her to finish adjusting them.  She always seemed to stay on the ground for just a little too long, staring at her feet, as if waiting for the socks to gain enough strength to stay up on their own.  I think I fell in love with her then. Her struggle.  I fell in love with all the catches.  I worried one day she would make her way down to fix them and in her final letdown, find herself unable to get back up.  Even at our young age, I had acquired this inherent need to be there to pick her up, just in case one day she found she was unable to rise from the ground.  I felt it my duty, really. I loved her and her socks.  She always found her way back upright though, then gradually rolled on like fog, dissipating into whatever was next. Just looking at her, you could tell she had known the weight of the world before she was even born into it. 

But my god, she was beautiful.  She had bones of glass, and air draped around her.  She was thin, blessed with ridges and valleys in her hips, back and thighs, where bone married her flesh. Her skin was reminiscent of opal, flecks of aquamarine in the midst of the purples, and yellows underneath her alabaster skin. She was a tortured vortex, trapped in a watercolor painting. She didn’t smile much.  She maintained a passive expression on her face, but to the knowing eye, nothing passed through her mind without excruciating attention. She wore her hair in braids.  She’d fashioned them that way since we were young. They cascaded over her shoulder blades, winding through all the indents and alongside all the shadows of her chest.  Her hair was long, and her mother was never there, so naturally like the survivor she was, she learned to braid.  It kept her hair out of her narrowed green eyes, and allowed them to stay fixed on what was in front of her.  I think that’s why she still wears them like that over ten years later.  She is 16 now, braids to her side, still looking forward.

She has the mountains behind her.  She may proceed uncertainly at times, but they stand unwaveringly, ready to support her.  It’s late, and all these things run through my head as I look to her now. She’s catching the red-eye bus to San Francisco where she might be able to disappear.  She had told me stories of people that had gone there to start over, and it was the only idea that really propelled her forward anymore.  She’s looking around, and I keep my hat down.  I told her I’d let her leave with neither protest nor struggle.  I know she loved me, but she needed to find love for herself.  I wanted that more for her than I wanted her for myself. She needed to fulfill her dreams of anonymity so that she may reclaim a purpose.  She told me that in her room once, last year.  It was rainy out.  I traced my fingers down the peaks of her spine, and all along her bare back while she lay motionless on my chest.  I lost my purpose, she said.  I have become a product of the consequences from merely being born, and I need to reclaim my choice in life.  I had never been much of talker, so I simply said okay or something of that nature.  She needed this, and I loved her.  So we didn’t talk much after that, and now she’s here.  And I’m here, standing in the shadows as I have always done, watching, making sure she doesn’t stay on the ground too long. 

It’s almost time now and I see her fondling the bus pass in her hand, massaging the corners like a baby blanket.  That ticket is her free pass to becoming anyone else.  She had those same socks on that she had worn so many years ago, finally holding their own and bracing her ankles, ready to take these next steps with her.  I was out of view, but I wondered if she could feel me like I could feel her.  She had her sketch pad in her left hand, and her blue backpack hanging off her shoulder.  It had held beers that got us drunk for the first time, various outfits for her to change into so that she might escape her house without being slurred at, called trash, or being told she was asking for whatever came to her.  It had held letters we had written each other our first year of high school.  Now it held nothing and because of that, it held everything.  I could see her starting to fade out already, her past dissolving away.  The bus driver walked by her, and I could hear him mention something about needing to be careful riding a bus so late and being so young.  She brushed her braid back nervously and thanked him for his concern.  He pulled on his suspenders and asked if anyone knew she was here.  A mom? Boyfriend? Anyone to see you off? I heard him inquire.  No mom, she said.  Then she hesitated. The boyfriend word had never been comfortable to her. She suddenly dropped to the ground. I lurched forward, ready to be there to pick her up.  She pretended to adjust her perfectly in place socks, staying focused on the ground holding her up.  He looked at this strange, beautiful vessel on the ground, shrugged and walked away. Kids these days, he must be thinking. The bus revved up.  All aboard!  I checked my watch.  It was time. People started to line up now, eager to seek new beginnings, and maybe looking to get away from old ones. She stayed there for a while, almost too long, looking at her shoes.  Just as I began to move from my post, she stood.  She stood tall, and she smiled.  She took her braids out and shook out that long brown hair.  She stood in line, and awaited her turn.  Suspender guy looked at her, smiled, took her pass, stamped it, and handed it back to her. She thanked him back, then turned to her right.  My first instinct was to turn away, wade back the way I always had.  She smiled at me and winked.  She winked.  I had never seen her do that before.  I knew I could get on that bus.  I had already bought a pass, just in case she couldn’t get up on her own.  But now she was standing, smiling and winking.  She didn’t even look winded. What was she trying to say to me?  Did she need me?  Or was this her being reborn, and telling me she had what she needed now?  She did what she did best and disappeared into thin air, vanishing through the door and taking her seat on the bus.  I don’t know if I ever really knew her. I guess some people aren’t meant to be known by anyone but themselves. Suspender guy called last call and I stared at my ticket.

I looked up at the bus.   That girl had mountains in her now. She’d always had the mountains in her. 

First Short Story
.K SG C.

 

No comments:

Post a Comment