The Beating...

The speeding feet in the pounding rain. The perpetual beat of a heart. Pounding blood. There is a cave in my heart.
Stepping out of the rain, into the shadows, the noise transitions from the wash of the cloudburst to the flow of your anxious blood. Then to the pounding of your heart. It's so loud. Terrifying, yet trusted.
The roar is overwhelmed by the beating. The beating of dark membranes. You have disturbed them. You are enveloped by their plethora of leather-silk wings.
Neither bird nor beast, the ostracized. Bats. After they have settled, you see the moonlight reflected in two tapetums. The truth in those eyes, is it familiar to you? Or should you be frightened? How many lives has this creature lived?
Come in, friend. Step closer, enemy. You were washed by the rain, rinsed by the darkness, dried by the wings, and clothed. By a purpose.
Am I a panther? Am I the dusk?

THE PLAN for Labels

CHARACTERS are influential people in my tales.
BROWN is tales from a span of ages.
WHITE is tales from age 0-7.
RED is tales from age 8-14.
ORANGE is tales from age 14-21.
YELLOW is tales from age 22-28.
GREEN is tales from age 29-35.
BLUE is tales from age 36-42.
INDIGO is tales from age 43-49.
PURPLE is tales from age 50-56.
BLACK is tales from age 57-63.
Grey is an insight into how these tales may be affecting me.

Labels

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Byrd

My mother's boyfriend after I moved to Arizona and beyond.

He was highly intelligent. Part of two different clubs for vain people with excessively high IQs. You know the two. He was a formidable swordsman too. Sounds like my mom finally picked a winner, no?

He'd been living with his mom for the last 25 years. Doing NOTHING for a living. You see, when he was fresh out of high school, with all the prestigious colleges jocking for him, he chose a girl instead. Shortly after their joyful marriage, she was murdered. He fell into a depression he never recovered from.

Decades later, my mom took him on as her latest fixer-upper. At the time, he was hooked on morphine. She nursed him off that, only to have him fall into alcoholism. The alcohol raced through his already ravaged body, sending him to the hospital with liver damage. Upon returning to his mother's house, he cashed in the alcohol for pills.

One night, Asterisk, feeling lonesome and sorry for himself, paid Byrd and my mother a visit. Byrd punched Risk (terrible idea) and Risk jumped in his truck and used it as a weapon.

Back from the hospital, Byrd added pain-killers back to his repertoire of addictions. He overdosed, leaving my mom to cart him back to the hospital for the umpteenth time. This time, doctors were more concerned than my mother. And Byrd's mother? She said: "I don't care if he dies."

I can understand her disappointment, but if you don't have the parenting skills to get the kids out and keep them out, even under his special circumstances, it's YOUR damn fault.

He took the message to his already fractured heart. He told my mom: "Sorry I put you through this, that I'm leaving you like this," before slipping into a three day coma and, ultimately, death.

That was October of '07. Right when I was reeling from having failed my midterms. The fact that I was 3,000 miles away from helping my heart-stricken mother started my own slide into the deepest depression I've personally ever experienced. Life got worse from there...

1 Responses:

Michael Mata said...

Fascinating and heart-rendering. Funny how you can slide into hell and come out of the experience a survivor.