Bittersweet Memories: Part 2 – Chapter 76
Bittersweet Memories
âAre you sure you want to try this?â my psychologist asks. âHypnotherapy could help, but it could also generate even more false memories if it works at all. It isnât like in the movies, where youâll just magically remember everything. Because your amnesia has lasted for so many years, the chances of full recovery are slim.â
I nod without hesitation. âI want to try. Recently Iâve been told a lot of things about my past, and while they donât feel right, I can suddenly remember those exact scenes. I canât tell what is true and what isnât. I want at least a hint of my own memories, something thatâs mine, not something Iâm being told is true.â
âI understand,â the doctor says. âLetâs give it a try then, shall we?â
She leads me to the sofa and tells me to make myself comfortable. Iâm nervous, scared of what I might see, but I close my eyes nonetheless.
âLetâs start with controlling your breathing, okay?â
I follow her steps, counting my breaths until my thoughts still, going through the motions with her. I try my best to imagine the serene landscape sheâs describing, the sun shining on my face. It takes a while, but eventually, I sink into the fantasy she laid out. She takes her time, slowly adding some of the details I told her about into the scenario, until it all starts to feel real.
âThat man you keep dreaming of, heâs smiling at you and grabs your hand.â
I never used to be able to see his face, but this time I picture him as Silas, the younger version of him I saw in my memories. Could it truly be him?
âHe pulls you along, the two of you walking hand in hand.â
My imagination follows the scenario and I just watch as the scene becomes more and more familiar, until weâre standing underneath a large blossom tree. One Iâve seen before. I gasp and sit up, my hands wrapping around myself.
âWhat is it? What did you see?â
I shake my head, a sad smile on my face. âNothing. It was just a place I went to recently. It isnât something from my past.â
She nods and smiles in understanding. âWe can try it again soon, if you want, but your case is tricky. Iâm not sure itâll work.â
I rise to my feet and nod. âI get it. Thank you for trying nonetheless.â
Iâm absentminded as I leave her office, something not feeling quite right. Thereâs something about the blossom tree that feels like it was a sign.
I hesitate for a moment before flagging down a taxi, trying my hardest to recall the directions to the place Silas took me to on my birthday. It was that very same tree, Iâm sure of it.
I stare up at the no trespassing sign as I push the taxi door closed, a strange sense of belonging washing over me. I know this place, and it isnât just because Silas took me here recently.
I walk up to the tree, my head throbbing, almost as though it wants me to remember, but canât push past the blocks containing it.
I place my hand against the tree trunk and inhale shakily. âTell me your secrets,â I whisper. âTell me mine.â
I look around, unsure what for, until my eyes land on a small shovel hidden behind the tree. It looks old, rust eating at the handles, but the moment I see it, I just know thatâs what I was after. I grab it with both hands and stare at it for a moment, trying to figure out why it feels so familiar to me. I must have used this before.
My knees hit the floor as I start to dig, unsure why but certain thatâs what Iâm here for. Before long, the shovel hits something hard, and I dig out a glass bottle. I brush the dirt off and hold it up to the light. Thereâs something in there. I open the bottle carefully and take out the paper inside it, my hands trembling as I uncurl it.
Itâs a drawing of me. Or rather, itâs a handmade birthday card, similar to the one Silas gave me this year. This one too, was no doubt drawn by him. Itâs an image of a younger me sitting underneath the blossom tree, my ankles crossed and my face tipped up toward the sun, a happy smile on my face.
I open it hesitantly, my eyes widening at the date written on the top right corner. Itâs a birthday card for last year, back when Iâd just started dating Ryan.
Alanna, my ray of sunshine
Itâs been over four years since you went missing, and I still come here every year on your birthday. No matter how much time passes, I canât let go. I canât give up hope that someday Iâll run into you somewhere, and youâll explain to me why you disappeared without a word.
I keep dreaming that you and I grow old together, and the years we spent apart are one of those things weâll tell our grandchildren about. The epic love story of their grandparents.
The more time passes, the more I wonder if maybe Iâm wrong, and nothing happened to you at all. Maybe you just had enough of the life we lived. Maybe being with me was too hard. Maybe hope wasnât enough to live on. Maybe that last argument we had made you realize that you can do better, and you left to create a better life for yourself than what I couldâve given you.
Who knows⦠maybe youâre out there, happy with someone else. If you are, Iâll wish you the best and quietly cheer you on. The only thing Iâve ever wanted for you was happiness, even if it isnât with me.
I love you, Alanna. Even after all these years. I loved you long before I first uttered those words, and Iâll love you until I draw my last breath. I hope youâre out there somewhere, so Iâll get to tell you this in person someday: Happy birthday, Ray.
Ψ
The letter is signed with the Ï symbol, and hot tears stream down my cheeks. Ï is a person. Itâs Silas. Heâs the one Iâve been looking for.
I hate that I canât remember anything about him, about us. I bite down on my lip and move to fill the hole I just dug, but just before I throw on some dirt, I see something else buried. Another bottle.
I pull that out too and continue to dig, unearthing a total of four bottles, including the one Iâve already opened. There seems to be one for every year since I woke up in the hospital, all of them containing a handmade birthday card.
It canât be that I ran away because Silas stalked me. These bottles prove that he loved me more than anything, holding onto our relationship even as I went missing.
But if we were dating, then why do I remember us arguing? Why do I remember screaming at him to stay away from me? Was it just an argument, or was there more to it?
I draw my knees to my chest as tears flow down my face. I need to know the full truth, and no one but me can give me that.