1 word, 2 lips, 3 4 5 fingers form 1 fist.
1 corner, 2 parents, 3 4 5 reasons to hide.
1 child, 2 eyes, 3 4 17 years of fear.
A broken broomstick, a pair of wild faces, angry whispers, locks on my door.
Look at me, is what I wanted to say to you. Talk to me every once in a while. Find me a cure for these tears, Iâd really like to exhale for the first time in my life.
Itâs been 2 weeks.
2 weeks of the same routine, 2 weeks of nothing but routine. 2 weeks with the cellmate who does not touch me. Adam is adapting to the system. He never complains, he never volunteers too much information, he continues to ask too many questions.
Heâs nice to me.
I sit by the window and watch the rain and the leaves and the snow collide. They take turns dancing in the wind, performing choreographed routines for unsuspecting masses. The soldiers stomp stomp stomp through the rain, crushing leaves and fallen snow under their feet. Their hands are wrapped in gloves wrapped around guns that could put a bullet through a million possibilities. They donât bother to be bothered by the beauty that falls from the sky. They donât understand the freedom in feeling the universe on their skin. They donât care.
I wish I could stuff my mouth full of raindrops and fill my pockets full of snow. I wish I could trace the veins in a fallen leaf and feel the wind pinch my nose.
Instead, I ignore the desperation sticking my fingers together and watch for the bird Iâve only seen in my dreams. Birds used to fly, is what the stories say. Before the ozone layer deteriorated, before the pollutants mutated the creatures into something horrible different. They say the weather wasnât always so unpredictable. They say there were birds who used to soar through the skies like planes.
It seems strange that a small animal could achieve anything as complex as human engineering, but the possibility is too enticing to ignore. Iâve dreamt about the same bird flying through the same sky for exactly 10 years. White with streaks of gold like a crown atop its head.
Itâs the only dream I have that gives me peace.
âWhat are you writing?â
I squint up at his strong stature, the easy grin on his face. I donât know how he manages to smile in spite of everything. I wonder if he can hold on to that shape, that special curve of the mouth that changes lives. I wonder how heâll feel in 1 month and I shudder at the thought.
I donât want him to end up like me.
Empty.
âHeyââ He grabs the blanket off my bed and crouches next to me, wasting no time wrapping the thin cloth around my thinner shoulders. âYou okay?â
I try to smile. Decide to avoid his question. âThank you for the blanket.â
He sits down next to me and leans against the wall. His shoulders are so close too close His body heat does more for me than the blanket ever will. Something in my joints aches with an acute yearning, a desperate need Iâve never been able to fulfill. My bones are begging for something I cannot allow.
He glances at the little notebook tucked in my hand, at the broken pen clutched in my fist. I close the book and roll it into a little ball. I shove it into a crack in the wall. I study the pen in my palm. I know heâs staring at me.
âAre you writing a book?â
âNo.â No I am not writing a book.
âMaybe you should.â
I turn to meet his eyes and regret it immediately. There are less than 3 inches between us and I canât move because my body only knows how to freeze. Every muscle every movement tightens, every vertebra in my spinal column is a block of ice. Iâm holding my breath and my eyes are wide, locked, caught in the intensity of his gaze. I canât look away. I donât know how to retreat.
Oh.
God.
His eyes.
Iâve been lying to myself, determined to deny the impossible.
I know him I know him I know him I know him The boy I used to know.
âTheyâre going to destroy the English language,â he says, his voice careful, quiet.
I fight to catch my breath.
âThey want to re-create everything,â he continues. âThey want to redesign everything. They want to destroy anything that couldâve been the reason for our problems. They think we need a new, universal language.â He drops his voice. Drops his eyes. âThey want to destroy everything. Every language in history.â
âNo.â My breath hitches. Spots cloud my vision.
âI know.â
âNo.â This I did not know.
He looks up. âItâs good that youâre writing things down. One day what youâre doing will be illegal.â
Iâve begun to shake. My body is suddenly fighting a maelstrom of emotions, my brain plagued by the world Iâm losing and pained by this boy who does not remember me. The pen stumbles its way to the floor and Iâm gripping the blanket so hard Iâm afraid itâs going to tear. Ice slices my skin, horror clots my veins. I never thought it would get this bad. I never thought The Reestablishment would take things so far. Theyâre incinerating culture, the beauty of diversity. The new citizens of our world will be reduced to nothing but numbers, easily interchangeable, easily removable, easily destroyed for disobedience.
We have lost our humanity.
I wrap the blanket around my shoulders until Iâm cocooned in the tremors that wonât stop terrorizing my body. Iâm horrified by my lack of self-control. I canât make myself still.
His hand is suddenly on my back.
His touch is scorching my skin through the layers of fabric and I inhale so fast my lungs collapse. Iâm caught in colliding currents of confusion, so desperate to be close so desperate to be far away. I donât know how to move away from him.
I donât want him to be afraid of me.
âHey.â His voice is soft so soft so soft. His arms are stronger than all the bones in my body. He pulls my swaddled figure close to his chest and I shatter. Two three four fifty thousand pieces of feeling stab me in the heart, melt into drops of warm honey that soothe the scars in my soul. The blanket is the only barrier between us and he pulls me closer, tighter, stronger, until I hear the beats humming deep within his chest and the steel of his arms around my body severs all ties to tension in my limbs. His heat melts the icicles propping me up from the inside out and I thaw I thaw I thaw, my eyes fluttering fast until they fall closed, until silent tears are streaming down my face and Iâve decided the only thing I want to freeze is his frame holding mine. âItâs okay,â he whispers. âYouâll be okay.â
Truth is a jealous, vicious mistress that never ever sleeps, is what I donât tell him. Iâll never be okay.
It takes every broken filament in my being to pull away from him. I do it because I have to.
Someone is sticking forks in my back as I trip away. The blanket catches my foot and I nearly fall before Adam reaches out to me again. âJulietteââ
âYou canât t-touch me.â My breathing is shallow and hard to swallow, my fingers shaking so fast I clench them into a fist. âYou canât touch me. You canât.â My eyes are trained on the door.
Heâs on his feet. âWhy not?â
âYou just canât,â I whisper to the walls.
âI donât understandâwhy wonât you talk to me? You sit in the corner all day and write in your book and look at everything but my face. You have so much to say to a piece of paper but Iâm standing right here and you donât even acknowledge me. Juliette, pleaseââ He reaches for my arm and I turn away. âWhy wonât you at least look at me? Iâm not going to hurt youââ
You donât remember me.
âYou donât know me.â My voice is even, flat; my limbs numb, amputated. âWeâve shared one space for two weeks and you think you know me but you donât know anything about me. Maybe I am crazy.â
âYouâre not,â he says through clenched teeth. âYou know youâre not.â
âThen maybe itâs you,â I say carefully, slowly. âBecause one of us is.â
âThatâs not trueââ
âTell me why youâre here, Adam. What are you doing in an insane asylum if you donât belong here?â
âIâve been asking you the same question since I got here.â
âMaybe you ask too many questions.â
I hear his hard exhalation of breath. He laughs a bitter laugh. âWeâre practically the only two people who are alive in this place and you want to shut me out, too?â
I close my eyes and focus on breathing. âYou can talk to me. Just donât touch me.â
7 seconds of silence join the conversation. âMaybe I want to touch you.â
There are 15,000 feelings of disbelief hole-punched in my heart. Iâm tempted by recklessness, aching aching aching, desperate forever for what I can never have. I turn my back on him but I canât keep the lies from spilling out of my lips. âMaybe I donât want you to.â
He makes a harsh sound. âI disgust you that much?â
I spin around, so caught off guard by his words I forget myself. Heâs staring at me, his face hard, his jaw set, his fingers flexing by his sides. His eyes are 2 buckets of rainwater: deep, fresh, clear.
Hurt.
âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â I canât breathe.
âYou canât just answer a simple question, can you?â He shakes his head and turns to the wall.
My face is cast in a neutral mold, my arms and legs filled with plaster. I feel nothing. I am nothing. I am empty of everything I will never move. Iâm staring at a small crack near my shoe. I will stare at it forever.
The blankets fall to the floor. The world fades out of focus, my ears outsource every sound to another dimension. My eyes close, my thoughts drift, my memories kick me in the heart.
I know him.
Iâve tried so hard to stop thinking about him.
Iâve tried so hard to forget his face.
Iâve tried so hard to get those blue blue blue eyes out of my head but I know him I know him I know him itâs been 3 years since I last saw him.
I could never forget Adam.
But heâs already forgotten me.