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

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Funky Chunk

There are a few beatings that stand out clearly in my memory. This is one of them.

Sometimes my grandmother would get so over-zealous in her slapping and punching, she'd have to latch on with her talons to one of my arms to keep from falling over. One of those times, as I fell to the floor, she dug in to my arm with her nails. I fell anyway. She nearly fell on top of me. She just kicked me a few times, wiped her flabby arm across her spittle-ridden mouth, and staggered away. But this time, when I fell, her nails had torn skin off my arm.

When I went to the bathroom to wash my wounds, to my horror, I found my missing flesh in the bathroom sink. My grandmother had washed up before me. When I mentioned my sickening story to her, she simply smiled.

I'm glad she's dead.

To this day, you can still see a small scar on my left forearm from that incident.

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