Broken Illuminations (New Story)

    • Gold Top Dog

    Broken Illuminations (New Story)

    Broken Illuminations
    She wasn't a very happy girl. She hadn't been since she had been small. She was dark, and broody, angsty and anxious, intellectually intelligent and socially stupid.

    And then she met him. The one.

    He was smart, funny, quirky, quick on the draw, but slow to remember past happenings. He was talented in music, and enjoyed editing video. His favorite color was blue, and he harmonized with any and everybody he could find.

    She studied him carefully, because he fascinated her. It was a rarity for the girl to find him unhappy, and if the boy wasn't his usual bouncy self, it wasn't because he was sad, but restless. Even in his restlessness, he was always cordial and wholly inviting, which is why he was almost never alone.

    Overwhelming to him, surely.

    Her constant watching and studiousness of his form and personality wasn't meant to be strange, but that was the way most people viewed it. After all, it was not normal to gaze at someone so intensely.

    It bothered her that they made fun of her for it, but she was a creature of intellect. She needed to study to learn, for learning was one of the few things she enjoyed in life.

    She loved how the boy's lips would pull back to reveal perfect teeth when he smiled, and she always took special note of his right canine as he did so. It was slightly darker than the rest, and thus her eye was drawn to it. His eyes would sparkle when he laughed, and whenever he stood to converse with others, if his hands were not shoved in his pockets, he would fidget with whatever was available to him.

    The girl was always wholly amused by the boy's fidgeting, as it was a trait she herself carried. She could not help but point it out, as he would, at times, choose to manipulate the oddest objects. He would play with his own tie, or rub the cuffs of his jacket, and he was not above scratching at or counting the bricks of the walls. He'd thumb the papers stapled upon the bulletin boards or stroke his own fingers, and if he could find nothing else to futz with, he would pace.

    The boy was an enigma.

    He held within him a purity she had never known before, and she was absolutely positive that nobody else she would ever meet could match his holiness. She was even afraid to touch him, for she felt that this would sully his sacred form.

    He was for looking, not touching. Sometimes she believed she wasn't even worthy of gazing at him. Longing for him.

    The boy was incredibly patient, dealing with her quirks and wildly changing moods. She was like the seasons, her emotions cycling from summer to winter, all in a single day.

    He did not mind. He took it all in stride, and with a grace that she hadn't even known existed.

    In the warmth of her summer the boy laughed with her. In the panic of her fall, the boy held her to keep her safe from the wind and cold. In her winter, the boy coaxed her to share her frigid secrets, and offered to warm them with the fire of his heart. And, it was because of the boy that she found her spring, and rebirth.

    The girl felt guilty that she put him through all that, for she was nothing more than shattered glass, waiting to slash him, and make him bleed. She was dangerous to the sacred child.

    "I will break you," she had whispered to him.
    "No, you will not break me. I promise," he had told her.
    "I will! I will break you, because I am broken!" she had cried, her breath caught in her chest.
    "You are not broken, you are wonderful," he had replied gently.

    She had believed him then. She couldn't bring herself to think that he would lie to her. The boy had never lied to her before. The boy kept her safe, and made her feel wanted.

    And that made her hurt all the more.

    Everyday she saw him was torturous to her, for she could not touch his face, the way she so longed to do. To caress his jaw, and thumb the scar that resided on his chin. She could not hug him the way she needed and wanted to hug him. It was not an option to do so. She could not press her forehead to his, and share with him every secret and hurt she had ever experienced. She could not hear every secret and hurt he had ever experienced, because those words were not meant for her ears.

    Her heart broke every time she saw the boy, for he was the light in her darkness, a beacon in the fog of her consciousness, but he was not something to be possessed, and could not belong to her. Her stomach twisted in knots every time her brown eyes met his, and she saw kindness and compassion, instead of the usual repulsion and disgust.

    Her entire body wept every time she left him, for it hurt her more to be without him. Even though she burned and her entire being was in agony being so near to him, she felt herself dying when he was away.

    But the girl was being selfish. The boy needed time away from her, and she felt it. Forcing herself to acquiesce to his silent request was impossible for her, and she knew the only way to save him was to keep herself away. He did not have to say anything. He was too kind to say anything, unaware that it was ok to be selfish at times.

    It was not fair.

    The boy was her light, her hope, her faith. He was her shelter, her food, and her water. He was a part of her life.

    The girl always felt sick to look at him, for she wanted to spirit him away, just for a few hours, and have time with just the two of them. Just time to talk and be normal with somebody. She wanted him to notice her, the way others were noticed, but she knew better. She was wrong for him, even though he made her better than she knew she could be.

    She loved the boy.

    She was not in love with the boy, but it was not the placid platonic love she had felt before either. But the girl was not one to say "I love you." She had trouble enough admitting to the boy that she needed him.

    It was all she could do that night not to cry when she had admitted to him that she was broken. It was all she could do not to throw herself into his body and scream "I HATE YOU!" because she loved him. It was all she could do not to collapse in his arms and cry at the utter unfairness of it all.

    She swallowed her feelings. The big black mass of love, hate, anger, need, and desire. She had to. She would lose him if she didn't.

    She could lose him anyway.

    He was becoming the other half of her soul, melding his spirit with hers. She felt him bandaging her wounds, closing the emotional holes that others had created. The boy was healing her. He was mending her from the inside out.

    She would break it. She was a saboteur, and could not help herself. She was getting too close, and she was afraid.

    She wrote stories for him, and music, though she didn't know why. She was not something to be noticed, and she didn't want to talk about such feelings, for she could not have that talk anymore. The talk that told her why it wouldn't work, or couldn't work. The talk that gently told her she was unwanted again.

    Unwanted because she was broken. Nobody wants something broken. It has no worth, and no use.

    She would hurt her other half before he could hurt her. Before she could hurt him more than he would ever hurt her. It was all painful...excruciating, but she did not know what else to do with herself.

    She knew even as she wrote that it would make or break the fragile friendship that had been cultivated. She knew that it was the endgame, and would test the bond that had been forged.

    She knew that this could break the illumination that the boy had created in her life.

    She knew, and now he knows.
    • Gold Top Dog

    Excellent writing, as usual, Xeph.

    It makes me think back on some of my experiences. How some things were unfixable. I can fix a light, a plug, replace a motor in a piece of equipment, even fix cars to some extent. But I cannot fix another human being. At best I can listen, which most times, is what the other person actually needs. They don't need someone to "fix" anything, just someone to hear them. Which did not save me from heartache and heartbreak. I realized that many things are beyond my control, except, in metaphor, for being control of my own feet and balance and stay on the surf board as I ride the waves.

    It's a great piece of writing that I am sure will evoke in others something that identifies with the protagonist. A bit of irony, I think, in that a bit of prose to show the loneliness of a person may end up showing that they are not alone.

     

    • Gold Top Dog

    I'm glad you liked it Ron.

    I try not to write about myself in stories, but believe it or not, this story is actually an explanation.  I wrote it to "the boy" so he could (attempt to) understand why I do the thing I do, why I watch him as I do, and why I need him as I do.

    He told me today that he hadn't read it yet.  My response was derisive.  "Ah, so that's why you're still talking to me."

    The ending of the story is meant to evoke worry/fear, as I am not sure how he will take what I've written.  He's not stupid, and should figure out within the first few sentences that I am writing about he and I.

    Let's just hope he doesn't take it the wrong way...
     

    • Gold Top Dog

    He'll just keep on loving you.

    And remember, the last thing to emerge from Pandora's Box is hope.

    • Gold Top Dog

    That was amazing! If I can write half as well as you, I'd be impressed! As it is, I only write poetry and short stories like this one but I like your stuff better then mineStick out tongue 

    • Gold Top Dog

    Well, you've got me biting my nails... 

    • Gold Top Dog

    I do not think he loves me Ron. Not the way I love him.  I think he cares about me, and worries about me.

    I should say, I know he does.  I had another panic attack a couple of nights ago.  I was so bad, a guy there (an EMT) thought I was strung out on drugs. He wanted the group to "take me in", because he was absolutely positive I had taken something.

    I was just having an anxiety attack.

    It's only happened once in front of T before, and I had to grab him to feel safe.  This time I didn't need to go to him.  ...he came to me.  He whispered in my ear, and though I hate hugging, when I panic, I need to be close to someone, to him.

    He grabbed me, and just spoke to me.  "It's ok, I'm right here.  Just hug me.  It's fine, you're fine, I won't go anywhere."

    It was cold in the parking lot, and I was afraid, and anxious, and embarrassed.  I cried into his neck.

    He held me tighter.

    He took me to Mary's car and after we were both in the back seat, I just collapsed on him, and I gasped, and I heaved, and I sobbed.

    He rubbed my ribs through my jacket.

    "What is it you need?" he would ask me.

    I could only nudge my head into his ribcage.  Our universal signal for "All I need is you."

    Without being told, and without him even knowing what it REALLY was I needed, he slipped is hand in mine, and he rubbed my fingers.  He murmured and rumbled at me, he made me safe every time I was startled.  He made sure I didn't get sick, and that I hadn't passed out.

    He wouldn't let me put my head down on the table in the ice cream parlor.

    He played games with me, to keep me alert and awake.  Asking all kinds of obscure questions.  "What's your favorite planet?  What's your favorite...geometic shape?  What's your favorite kind of dog? What's your favorite band?  What's your favorite kind of car?"

    I would answer him, but my vision was too blurred to look at him.

    "Jackie?  Jackie look at me.  Look...at me.  Can you keep your head up for me please?"

    And, because it was him, and I value him so, even though I felt violently ill, I would force my head off the table top to gaze at him through bleary eyes, my sight hazy from lack of air.

    "That's good, you're doin' alright.  How do you feel on a scale of 1-10?"

    And so it went for over an hour.

    So why am I trying to break this?
     

    • Gold Top Dog

    Xeph
    I do not think he loves me Ron. Not the way I love him.

     

    I think he loves you and it's not quite the same way you love him and that may be a good thing. His love balances with yours.

    Xeph
    So why am I trying to break this?

     

    I don't know except to say that it's rooted in your self-image. You have a low self-image. But, like others, you have a problem considering the possibility that you might be wrong. That you might, indeed, be a great gal, deserving of the good things in life. To admit that is to admit that your current self-image is wrong. He is with you because you are worthy and he can see that. I bet he sees more than you think he does.

    But that's just my opinion. I can fix a light, a car, an air conditioner, but I can't fix a human.

    • Gold Top Dog

    He is not a boyfriend....only a friend.  They are always only friends, as they never want me in the same manner I want them.  I swallow the feelings because I have no other choice, aside from losing them.  I can't. 

    I do not feel particularly inspired to write at present, but I know I need to write.  So, here I am.

    I'm not even sure where I should start, as there is so much to say, and so little time to say it.  Of course, the best place would be to start at the beginning, but I am not even sure where the beginning...begins.

    I suppose I could start by writing about Sunday evening.  That seems as good a place as any.

    Sunday was the day that Thurber and his band (Jack Pratt and the Blak Yak) were to compete in their battle of the bands down in Madison.  I had told him as soon as he let me know they had moved on to the next round that I would be there to cheer them on.

    I promised.

    It always seems to start with a promise...

    I ended up riding down to Madtown with Mary, Brittany, Mallory, and Lindsay.  I should have known better.  I felt incredibly lonely the entire ride down there, as Mallory and Brittany talked to each other, and Lindsay and Mary talked to each other.  I talked to none of them.  I tried, but their conversations had nothing to do with me, or anything I understood, and making an effort to turn the word flow was futile.

    We all went to dinner at Noodles and met up with Simon.  I was by myself until Simon came, and only got to converse with him a little bit before the hoarde took him over, and got him to talk about rifling through the intestines of swine, looking for parasites.

    I'd had macaroni and cheese.

    I was  upset at the lack of involvement, and, as a result, I consumed to massive Rice Krispies wedges.  Butter, marshmallow, and rice crisps, all packed into a nice giant triangle for my consumption.  They made me feel a bit queasy.

    We returned to the bar (which held the lame name of the "High Noon Saloon";), and the band was getting ready to go.  All of them came up to say hi to me except Mack (we don't know each other all that well anyway), and Thurber (which...hurt).  They were all excited and having a blast.  I talked to T minimally before he had to go on.  He needed to get into his "zone".

    Understandable.

    The time came and they all got on stage.  Excellent is not a proper description, but it is all I can come up with right now.  People were talking about them, all good things.  They were thoroughly impressed by T's playing, and Bryanna got a few looks and nods from some nearby men.

    "She's feisty.  She has spunk.  I like that," one man said, stroking his goatee.

    When all was said and done, hugs were exchanged along with ecstatic "Congratulations!" and they began packing up.  Another band was preparing to play....The Readiness they were called.  We all decided to stay and listen to them before we went to grab a quick bite to eat.

    Big mistake.

    They began to play, but what it was I don't know.  I certainly wouldn't have called it music.  It was nothing but blaring ***.  Wild guitar, head banging, and some man possessed by the devil screaming into a microphone.  I felt the bass thumping through my body, and it made me queasy.  The satanic voice in my ear grated at my nerves....and it started.

    I couldn't breathe, and I could barely move.  I could only look back and forth between Justin, and Thurber, and Brittany.  They were blurry.  I was dizzy.  I wanted to fall over.  I tried to cover my ears to hide from the noise, and I stood closer to T, needing his presence.  But it didn't help.  It was all just so loud.

    They asked me if I was ok, and I could only shake my head no.

    We went outside, into the chill of the night, and I collapsed against the wall just outside the door.  There was shouting, but I wasn't sure from where.  I couldn't tell if it was humans, or Satan inside.  I was lost.

    I am told there was an EMT there.  He asked me name, if I was on anything, if I had had anything to drink.  How old was I?  Had this happened before?  Were they sure I hadn't had anything?

    According to everybody else, Thurber took care of the vast majority of it.

    "Jackie.  She doesn't drink.  Twenty-two.  About a month ago.  She's not on anything."

    Seriously man, I don't care if she is, she's clearly on something.  Look at her.

    "She's NOT on anything," they all insisted.

    I've seen this before, she has to be on something.

    T had pulled me to my feet, and we stumbled down cold steps.  I lay limply against his body until the door opened and the voice of the Dark Prince invaded my senses again.  I shrieked and buried my face in my hands before I turned into the small body and sobbed against him.

    He was angry, but not at me.  He was mad at the EMT, for not believing him.  He was mad that the guy wouldn't let us be so he could do what he needed to do.  I felt his anger, and his fear, and his need to do something.  He did the only thing he knew how to do.

    He held me.

    He spoke to me as he held me, and I mumbled incoherent phrases along with one word.  Broken.  He said for ten or fifteen minutes all I did was cry into him "Broken, broken, broken, broken, broken, she is broken, broken broken...."

    I do not remember it.

    I remember his voice in my ear.  Whispering, murmuring, rumbling to me as he held me tighter.
    "Hey, hey, it's ok.  I'm right here.  It's alright.  Hug me, you're ok, you're ok, I promise you're ok.  It's alright."

    And I cried, and cried, and tried to hide within him.

    We staggered to Mary's car where I fell into the backseat.  He was there in an instant, and I didn't even think about what I was doing.  I curled up against the cushioning and pressed myself into his frame, my face buried between hip and ribcage, arms around his waist.

    He held me, and rubbed along my spine.  He spoke to me and stroked the knots in my neck.  He asked me how I was, and if I needed anything.  He asked me how I was feeling.

    "Tired," I had wheezed at him.  And I was.  I was so very tired, and I was falling asleep under the sweet touch.

    I had calmed considerably, though loud jolts of the car against the snow and ice would startle me and start the attack all over again.  He would only grab me and hug me to his body, his words convincing me that it was ok, it was just the snow.  We were on a bumpy road.

    "What do you need right now?" he would ask me.

    I could not speak very well, and so I simply have him the universal signal we had come to understand.  I pushed my head into his side and nuzzled.  It was a simple gesture, but he understood it.  It meant "I only need you.  Just you."  And without being told, without needing to be coerced, he gently slid his hand in mine, and he rubbed my fingers.

    I rubbed his fingers back.

    I was wholly lucid at this point, but embarrassed, so I remained hidden in his body.  I swear that I would have crawled inside him if I could have.  I needed to be that close to him.  Needed to feel him, smell him, find comfort in him.

    "The girl she is sorry she is broken," I mumbled to him.
    "What?" he said.  He hadn't heard.
    "The girl is sorry she is broken," I whispered, quieter than the first time.
    "The girl loves the boy," I said, even more quietly.

    He hadn't heard.

    We parked somewhere, but I wasn't sure where we were.  I needed to throw up.  The anxiety combined with the earlier meal had me feeling all sorts of ill, and I was sure that if it were possible, I was seven shades of green.

    I darted out of the car only to find myself catching my falling form on the trunk of the car.

    He was there in an instant, holding me up, asking me if I was alright.  He even asked if I need to puke.

    "I do, but I can't," I said.

    We somehow ended up in an ice cream parlor.  It was warm, and the food smells that had been outside weren't contained with the shop, so I felt a little less sick.

    I fell into a chair he offered, and one of the girls got me water while I gave in to my need of putting my head down.  I didn't get to keep it there however, which angered me a bit.

    "No. No, no.  Jackie, Jackie pick your head up!" he yelled at me.
    I groaned.
    "Hey, can you look up here?  Pick your head up for me.  Look at me," he yipped, frantic.  He snapped his fingers in my face, and I startled, my eyes darting to his, bleary from lack of oxygen.
    "Good.  That's good.  How are you feeling on a scale of 1-10?" came the inquiry.
    I groaned again before I responded "About a 3."

    He began playing games with me, trying to keep me alert.  We played the "Favorite Things" game, in which he would ask me what my favorite things were.  But they were not the usual favorite things.  They were incredibly odd and obscure things, to keep my attention.

    "What is your favorite color?  What is your favorite planet?  What is your favorite...geometric shape?  What is your favorite number.  Name your favorite breed of dog in every group.  Who is your favorite band?"

    He asked one after the other, and he made me give him reasons.  Every time he asked a question, the moment I answered him, he would respond "Why?"  I felt him smile more than saw him, and at one point he grinned at me and said "I love it how you have a reason and response for absolutely every single thing I ask you."

    When he asked me who my favorite band was, without a thought, I quietly said, "You."  I heard Lindsay and Mary say "Awww!  That's sweet!"

    He laughed and held my hand as we rubbed each others fingers.

    I was feeling better and enjoying the games.  They made me spell things, and tell them words.  The lexicon was putting in her work.

    I was feeling tired again, and so I put my head down.  I went limp for a moment as I felt a headache coming on, and I was tired.

    "HEY!  Jackie.  Jackie!  JACKIE!"

    "HUH!! WHAT?!" I shot up and looked around, frightened.

    "Look at me!   Can you look at me?  Look...at...me! Right here, look in my eyes!" his voice raised as he tried to get my attention.

    "In my eyes, right here!  I'm right here!" and I looked at him, trying to focus my sight so I could see him.

    I was embarrassed to look at him, after what I'd put him through.  But I did as he asked, because it was him.  They were that beautiful bright brown, lightly tinged with a bit of gold around the edges.  A dreamy smile spread over my face as I stared into the ruddy orbs, and I felt my head sinking again.

    "No, no you keep your head up for me.  Can you do that?"

    I did.  For him.

    He intermittently asked me how I was feeling on a scale from one to ten.  I would answer him, and then he would respond with what he thought I REALLY was.

    "Why even bother to ask me if you're going to pick a different number?!" I stated, irritated.

    "Because this is how I know you're feeling better.  You're being sarcastic."

    "Jerk."

    "Damn!  Ya got me!" and he smiled.

    "Snot ball."

    "Hey, just trying to help."

    And so it went for the next thirty minutes or so before we finally collected ourselves and headed back to our respective cars.  I refrained from leaning on him on the way back to the bar, where we said our final "goodnight" 's.  I wanted to find more comfort within his presence, but knew that I could not take more than I already had.

    He shouted to Mack before he returned to the car's interior to pull me to his body and hug me before he left.

    I moved over to the side of the car where he had sat, and tried to will myself to sleep I was enveloped in the comfort of his scent, and the presence he had left behind.

    He had brightened my world again, but I wondered how much I had darkened his.