Going West

The sun was a burnt orange hint on the horizon as the crows screeched from the trees. To the east the mountain loomed an imposing black. I walked hands in pockets dodging white stains of excrement from the birds, wondering when the harbingers of ill times would shit on me.

It was cold; the type of cold that bit through the layers and found its home deep within the bones. I relished it and despised myself for needing it.

I knew she hated it. She pretended to tolerate it, but I knew. She would tell everyone I had dragged her over here against her will with promises of mild temperatures and no snow, but the reality was she was desperate to join me. She needed me and the security I could provide.

Put another way, she needed my money. She wasn’t broke by any stretch of the imagination, but when I’d met her in the bar in Boise, she’d been on her last legs. Down to the last couple of free drinks her smile would buy and three days short of the start of the month and the next allowance payment from home.

I should have known better then – I do now – but I was raw in the moment. I was coming off the death of my dreams: it was the end of a ten-year marriage, and a fifteen-year career, both ended by a fifty-something with an axe to grind and great legs. I was empty and looking for something I couldn’t put my finger on until she smiled at me.

She had emerald eyes that looked right through you, but caught enough to hold your attention, even as hers drifted. Her smile brought you in and had you feeling like you were all she needed, despite her wandering eyes. She was a dream.

I told her I was easing my way west, looking to end up in Alaska. She said that sounded nice and I should tell her over a drink, so I bought her a drink and told her. 

That was on Monday. I saw her at the bar Tuesday and Wednesday, but she was dancing with other partners. I felt the old jealous rage rise up in me.

She came to me on Thursday. Her allowance had come through and she’d paid off most of the debts her smile couldn’t cover, and was after another drink, wanted to hear more about my trip west.

I bought her a drink and I told her, and by the time I was on the train Monday morning, heading west to Oregon, she was sitting next to me, staring out the window taking it all in.

Every rotation of the train’s wheels brought each of us further west than we’d ever been. We loved it, ate it up, as we told each other more about what we were hoping to find. Her youth energized me. I don’t know what I did for her. We were both young enough to mistake this lust for love.

I’d like to say we were able to ride the wings of lust, or love, for a year or two, but we lasted three months before an unseasonable snow rolled through Portland in mid-December. This was on the heels of the coldest November in the last 50 years. 

The bloom fell off the rose then and she couldn’t keep her mouth shut about how I’d lied to her about what it was going to be like. She couldn’t help but nag at me about it. I see that now, that she couldn’t help it.

It got to be like the sound of these damn crows: a piercing screech, echoing about my head as it echoed about the buildings. It hurt, and I had to stop it.

You know what does warm me: that all these big cities have dirty rivers running through them where you can dump stuff you don’t want. So it goes with dreams.

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The Soul Departs

            The sun came through the blinds in slits coming to rest on her legs. The bed was positioned so no sun would touch her face. Most nights she struggled to find sleep, so once she had discovered it, she wanted to limit the potential disturbances as much as possible. The elephants upstairs and traffic on the highway couldn’t be helped, but the morning sun could.

            She looked peaceful now, mouth just open, eyes shut gently, covers tucked up to her midsection to combat the early morning cool. The only peculiarity were her arms . They rested across her chest in the style one equates with the Egyptian pharaohs. 

            Most mornings I watched her from the doorway. I was eager to see her calm after the ravings of the previous night. Her mind and body would rage against sleep, fighting it like the immune system fights disease. 

            It was exhausting. I was with her every day. I could see the toll it took on her. I know what it did to me. 

            I could never leave her to this fight on her own, so I stayed up with her each night, battling the demons that ate at her. They weren’t so much demons as they were thoughts. Thoughts, which sent surges of energy pulsing through the bloodstream, longing for some undescribed action.

            Action, had she known what it was, she could never take because of the exhaustion of the thousands of sleepless nights. I ached for her in my depths, hoping she would be able to find some peace. 

            That’s why this morning was so special. Most mornings her brow was creased with the trouble of her dreams. Today, her face was blank. No worries lay in knitted brows, just a dreamy calm.

            Most mornings I would go to her and nudge her towards wakefulness. Today, I left her. I couldn’t bear the thought of disturbing her now that she had found some rest. I drifted from the room, leaving her to rest in peace.

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Beginning

It started in the inky darkness of the morning under a thin stream of light. I fed a piece of white opportunity into the spool of the typewriter and sat staring at it. 

I don’t know if it was the lack of thoughts in my head or the lack of life at 3am, but the silence screamed in my ears. It was oppressive.

After 15 minutes of nothing, I walked to the kitchen and made coffee. Anything to break up the monotony. 

I wanted to jump on the Internet to look for inspiration, but I knew if I did that I would find distraction. It’s why I was using the typewriter. 

The coffee beeped its completion and I jumped a foot in the air. I took down a bottle of brandy and covered the bottom of my cup. It didn’t matter that I had to work later, this was too important. I needed to start. I needed courage. 

Fear is a horrible thing. It paralyzes. 

I don’t like blood either. It’s a piece of you coming out exposed to the world. If I hit a key on the typewriter I would be offering up myself in faded black ink. In my case, the only blood that hurts to give up.

So I was afraid to start. Even though I controlled whether or not anyone ever saw the page, I was paralyzed.

The coffee steamed in the pale light and I continued to stare at nothing and everything. I thought about how I ached to tell this story. And I wondered how I would screw it up. Then I felt horrible at the thought of never doing anything I wanted.

I took a sip of the coffee. The brandy burned. It began:

Tears streamed from her eyes as she pounded the keys.

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