The Capriciousness of Youth
The night is endless, and tonight—it smells of willow, myrtle, and coming rain. I spend these summer evenings dancing under trees until I tire myself to sleep. The winds in the fields emit a subtle calm, balanced with the warmth and humidity of the season. The sound of the trees rustling in the wind and the steady booming of rain clouds far away is akin to music. There is nothing in this world that can bring me to such nostalgia as evenings like these. They take me back to my days of innocence, filled with laughter, curiosity, and also naivety. This tall cliff against the ocean is a picturesque image of my childhood. It seems like it has been an eternity since I’ve been in this blissful ignorance. Then I wake, torn from perfection.
The booming of thunder takes me away from my paradise and my bloodshot eyes open. I cannot hear the music of nature, nor feel the cool wind against my face. I realize I am in my car and the windows jail me from the outside elements. However, the humidity has not escaped me and I raise my hand to wipe the sweat from my forehead. I breathe hard and feel a gurgling in my stomach as if the personified devil is lifting out of my gut. I open the door in time as the remnants of last night spill onto grass. I feel weak. A glass item falls out under me as I fall out and land on my back, neglecting the splatter of bile below me. I figure as it rolls against the outside of my leg that it is a broken bottle of what is responsible for my current condition. I grab it for comfort before my vision fades. I pray I will return to my beloved fields.
She was a lifeless, bloody, mess. She was still beautiful, which made me clench my fists in anger. I held the broken bottle in my hand, the glass stained from her blood. My arm was tired from repeatedly beating her with the weapon. She was nothing more than a corpse now, her soul gone to await judgment for her crime. She deserved it, but I couldn’t leave her lying there. I dragged her out into the garage and opened the trunk, slowly placing her inside. It was cruel that she still smelled as sweet as roses, but the metallic scent of her blood reminded me more of cloves. With a scowl, I shut the trunk—and her from my life.
The coming rain smells of iron, without a doubt polluted from the nearby city’s factories. The crack of a distant thunder wakes me as my mind is overcome with fear. I raise the broken bottle to my eyes and it is stained the color of maroon. I stand up slowly as my head begins to pound. I slowly stumble to the back of my car and lift the trunk to reveal the pale body of my victim. My stomach sinks as I lay my hand against her face, cold as the bottle—colder. The feeling of poison in my bowels returns and my head becomes light. I shut the trunk and vomit a second time onto the grass. I choke and wheeze in pain more from my heart than my stomach. Breathing deeply, I collapse to the ground on my side and attempt to remember the previous night’s events.
The bar was refreshingly cold from being heavily air conditioned. A man, my childhood friend, demanded we meet there to talk and said it was important, which only proved to make me hesitant to go. The tone he used hinted that it was not positive news. I begrudgingly walked further in and found him at a small two-person table in a corner of the hole-in-the-wall establishment. He saw me and silently motioned to sit with his hand, as his mouth was busy taking a drag from a cigarette. I complied slowly, unsure what to expect. He didn’t say anything for a little while, which was strange because words seemed to come to him so easily. “I’m sorry. I apologize that I have to be the one to show you this information, or rather that this even happened at all.” He spoke deeply as he trashed the cigarette in the ash tray and accessed his cell phone. He placed it on the center of the table, implying I was to look at what it displayed. I looked to him, not wanting to look, afraid of what I might have learned. He returned my gaze and darted his eyes to his phone, ensuring me the necessity of my cooperation. I did so slowly and against my better judgment. What I saw caused my heart to stop as I looked upon images of my wife. Her naked body was in the arms of another man, significantly older than I. She was joined with him the way she should have only been with me. I dropped the phone on the table, my mouth agape. My friend turned his head away from me. He pitied me, unable to look at the result of this unholy revelation.
“Jerry, what the fuck is this? Tell me what in God’s holy name this is!” He crossed his arms and it took him a second to speak at all, albeit quietly.
“For a while, I saw your wife in the city where I work. I wanted to say hello and see how things were with her after you two got married. She left before I got her attention and I saw her enter an alley, then a dodgy building. I became curious and followed her in only to find her talking with some man and…Well…I waited and took these pictures, then ran. I’m sorry.” My vision began to spiral as memories fractured of him leaving while I stayed at the bar, willingly drowning my sorrows the way society had taught me how. I remember: my rage, stealing liquor from the bar, running as fast as I could, tripping, falling, and the dirt in my face.
The cool dirt on my face feels comforting in this heat. I have truly descended into Hell and only the earth I lay against keeps me sane. However, I needed to rise, broken bottle in hand. I limp to the driver door, only to feel the pain of liquor and loss battering my skull. My sobering heart could not withstand the truth. I raised the bottle, smashing the driver window on my car door open like I wanted to smash the demonic frame of my friend’s cell. The bottle crumbles in my bleeding hand. The pain from what probably was a deep gash was present, but incomparable to that which tortured my mind. I slump down and lay my back against my car, then begin to sob.
She sobbed deeply. She told me she had no choice. She told me he threatened her with the power he had, that he would torture and kill me. That he would burn our house and sell her body to his colleagues when I was gone. Not if she complied. I didn’t listen to that lying whore, that tainted slut. Her contagious tears flowed through me as she fell to her knees and I ended her misery with the empty bottle that mirrored my heart.
My hands run through my hair and I snort up the mucus that begins to build up. I enter my car slowly and lay against the seat. Thunder roars as I turn on the car and look through my rear-view mirror, her hidden body in my sight. Incoming droplets patter against my coat through the broken window. I shift gear and accelerate off the cliff. My car, my dead wife, and I fall. It feels an eternity as we topple down. Yet, all I can think of is the beautiful ocean and the smell of the rain. We crash and the last living sight I behold is the deluge of water, sealing my liquid coffin.
Everything is bright. I am alone and nowhere with nothing. I appear as a child. I longed for seclusion, to retreat away. I am successful, yet it is unsatisfactory. Soon I am no longer alone. This glowing silhouette of a woman rejoins me and cradles my young head. This is the innocence that I sought, to return to ignorance and never suffer. I longed for this beauty, this naivety, this tranquility. The woman shrinks to my size, my age. She takes me by the hand and we leave. The light at our feet becomes blades of grass, and soil. The grass becomes endless and flows in a wind that I can feel all around me. There are trees and a cliff against an ocean’s tide. We run, and we dance under the trees. We dance until we tire and fall asleep—under the willow and the myrtle—after the rain.
As I end this piece, I'd like to say a few things I feel I'm obligated to.
Disclaimer:
This is somewhat an experimental first-person work. This is not about me and I am not a sad person at all, I'm very content usually and currently so I'd like to dissuade any concern for my sake. I merely told this in a perspective that swept me into a role so I can tell it as if I was in that role. Also, themes in this are not appropriate conclusions for real life situations and should be for no one. Get help if you start thinking like my main character. Sorry if these things are obvious to some, I'm putting this here in case it is not to others.
Additionally, although I love criticism on grammar, punctuation, spelling, and other mechanics (because I honestly can't find any in my works so I love being corrected to improve in that area specifically) I will discourage them until the contest is over because of rule number 7:
7. It is NOT acceptable for the participants to have someone else edit, fix or improve grammatical errors, or anything in your entry. You'll be disqualified without consideration if we find out.
However, you are welcome to criticize my experimentation, storytelling, perspective, storyline, characters, literary speech, or just about anything else story-related because that is where I feel I am less strong and I will also not be editing this story on account of those comments, only taking them into consideration for future works, as rare as they come.
Thanks.
1,500/1,500 words including title according to Microsoft Word 2007.
Jerry's cameo used with permission.