A few days ago, she lay without
a care. The warm summer wind breathed
outside her window, and the passing seasons
tinted the leaves from lush greens to
vibrant orange hues. In the back of her mind,
she made plans for tomorrow, the next day,
the next week: all as usual. Downstairs, her
parents bicker in amicable tones how much
cinnamon goes in the cookie dough.
The moon soon blankets the skies in
a veil of stars. The lamp by her bedside
flickers a faint gasp. She turns the switch and
closes her eyes beneath warm blankets
and the cold breeze of night.
Red and blue lights, sirens blaring, and
a deafening silence shatters the morning mist.
The bickering turns to bitter cries,
This book was originally published on Royal Road. Check it out there for the real experience.
and those two same voices the previous night
now fought each other with vicious ferocity. One
packs his bags and runs off. The other crumbles to
the floor, her legs too weak, unsteady. Mayhaps she
will never rise again quite the same.
An empty black bag goes in.
A full black bag comes out, strapped to a gurney.
The black cloth resembles a trash bag.
Church bells ring, the warm breath of summer
now faded. Only one voice stands alone among
the others. Now, there was but stone and
disturbed earth. God sent no signs. She noticed
no symptoms. The Devil sent no soldiers. She
closed her eyes, expecting, with plans for tomorrow
still swirling inside.
Now, by the open window, where the warm colors
no longer scatter through glass thickened by
silence, there sits an empty bed with vacant, cold sheets.
A memory of where something once
used to be.
Abrupt. Sudden. Without a thought. Without conscience.
Random. Empty. Void of reason. Void of meaning.