Right outside of Hulsey, after scuba let out at nine. My bag nestled beside me, and my braid dripped down my back. I had my phone in my hands, and I was absently turning it and polishing the orange cover, with my elbows on my knees. I know people assumed, if they wondered at all, that I was waiting for a ride. But I wasn't. My car was sitting a few dozen feet away, with half a tank of gas and the keys in the ignition. But there are some places you want to go that a car won't take you.
There are tears here. I don't like them. They burn, and when they are willed away they stick until it hurts to swallow. But, even after all these years, I don't know what to do with them. So I sat there contemplating my phone and letting people think I was waiting for someone--and I was. Hoping that, if I provided the opportunity, somebody would come along with the gift of a few moments. That would have been nice.
But they never came. So after a while I took a deep breath and stood up, slung my bag on my back, and grabbed my keys. I let the car take me home, since tonight, at least, I didn't find a way to where I wanted to go. Maybe tomorrow.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Rosemary
The air is heavy
Flowing sluggishly, pouring
Into the darkening hollows
Under pear trees and hedges
Lightning slides effortlessly
Through the throbbing thunder
Mixed with the tang of rosemary
That lives quietly in a red pot
Here on the porch rail
Beside my elbow.
Flowing sluggishly, pouring
Into the darkening hollows
Under pear trees and hedges
Lightning slides effortlessly
Through the throbbing thunder
Mixed with the tang of rosemary
That lives quietly in a red pot
Here on the porch rail
Beside my elbow.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Elevator
This is my rough draft of the Flash Fiction for Creative Writing.
She blinks, walking in from the sunlight to a dark lobby. There are starburst aftereffects clouding her vision—even so, she deftly slides around the corner, even half blinded, and strides rapidly towards the elevators. Both doors stand open.
A man, perhaps young, perhaps not, stands in front of the elevators, several feet away, facing the opposite direction. His body angles away from the elevators, indicates his disinterest even more than his lack of movement towards them. She doesn’t really look at him, only registers that he is not in her way and is not heading for the open doors that are her destination.
Her shoulder curves, her foot takes the step to lead her towards the elevator—and he turns to look at her, sends her waves of attention and intention
—cold sweat—
she doesn’t look back, but she feels it in a shudder down her spine—and her heart sinks. She’s on the elevator now and pushes the button, wills the doors to close, wills him not to appear, watches the “4” light up on the bank of lights
—he’ll see it—
watching the doors pause an eternity, slowly slide almost shut until a shoulder shoves between them, almost too late to make it, but he does and he’s on, and she asks him what floor, can’t stop being polite, although now she feels irrational panic, why should she feel that way?
—always knew the doors wouldn’t open if you were caught between them—
silently curses the lit button that tells him where she’s going. He looks at the bank of lights, telltale lit circle, and replies “four” but she barely registers it except as affirmation she doesn’t want, already caught up in furious rationalizing. But her rational coldly reminds her that floor three is the men’s floor, that the only boys she sees on fourth are with their girlfriends, that his intentions are screaming a warning
—how do I know I’m right but I do—
elevator rises and she keeps a tight rein on the panic that still blooms where it began the second he looked at her, and she sees his subtle intent body language, she knows what happens next
—bloody hellfire and damnation—
slides her hand down in her bag, fits her few keys through her fingers, clenches her fist to test the grip. Already she thinks of what few advantages she holds if it comes down to it. The shoulder bag is the first thing that will go, to free her arms—if time permits, straight at his face. Silently she reviews the training—how to put your body into a swing to get maximum impact, how to defend if attacked from behind
—thank you Max—
and the elevator stops
—has it only been ten seconds—
and the doors open. She hesitates, she knows he won’t move first, doesn’t want to force the issue, walks out, takes the third hall. Behind her, perhaps ten feet, he follows. She curses the silent carpet, checks his position as they move. He maintains the distance and she maintains her pace, stifles the urge to run. She passes doors—so does he. Only ten more feet left
—only my door and the fire escape left—
and no more doubt now, only fear she’ll screw this up. Her hand hangs down, forgotten, keys extended, as she plans her response
—Father don’t let me forget what to do—
the adrenaline begins to flow down her fingers; she stops planning stops thinking stops everything but movement and just listens
—red and silver hell, he’s still moving—
and her key is in the door, it’s turning, and she’s tense because this is the most dangerous part, sings out “Hey, Mary!”
—please somebody please be here—
and the door is closing behind her with a bang, because all doors here open and close like the crack of doom but she’s safe and has to shake out the adrenaline, or maybe she just shakes, and rubs out the key prints on her palms. Much later, she wonders why it never occurred to her to factor screaming into her plans.
There is one more door, across the hall, that he could have taken; one reason to be on fourth that didn’t include her, didn’t warrant the sweat chilling on her neck, didn't require her fear of what she had to do.
She listens for the next few minutes, but nothing disturbs the quiet of the hall. Far away, an elevator hums.
Probably not. But I'll know.
She blinks, walking in from the sunlight to a dark lobby. There are starburst aftereffects clouding her vision—even so, she deftly slides around the corner, even half blinded, and strides rapidly towards the elevators. Both doors stand open.
A man, perhaps young, perhaps not, stands in front of the elevators, several feet away, facing the opposite direction. His body angles away from the elevators, indicates his disinterest even more than his lack of movement towards them. She doesn’t really look at him, only registers that he is not in her way and is not heading for the open doors that are her destination.
Her shoulder curves, her foot takes the step to lead her towards the elevator—and he turns to look at her, sends her waves of attention and intention
—cold sweat—
she doesn’t look back, but she feels it in a shudder down her spine—and her heart sinks. She’s on the elevator now and pushes the button, wills the doors to close, wills him not to appear, watches the “4” light up on the bank of lights
—he’ll see it—
watching the doors pause an eternity, slowly slide almost shut until a shoulder shoves between them, almost too late to make it, but he does and he’s on, and she asks him what floor, can’t stop being polite, although now she feels irrational panic, why should she feel that way?
—always knew the doors wouldn’t open if you were caught between them—
silently curses the lit button that tells him where she’s going. He looks at the bank of lights, telltale lit circle, and replies “four” but she barely registers it except as affirmation she doesn’t want, already caught up in furious rationalizing. But her rational coldly reminds her that floor three is the men’s floor, that the only boys she sees on fourth are with their girlfriends, that his intentions are screaming a warning
—how do I know I’m right but I do—
elevator rises and she keeps a tight rein on the panic that still blooms where it began the second he looked at her, and she sees his subtle intent body language, she knows what happens next
—bloody hellfire and damnation—
slides her hand down in her bag, fits her few keys through her fingers, clenches her fist to test the grip. Already she thinks of what few advantages she holds if it comes down to it. The shoulder bag is the first thing that will go, to free her arms—if time permits, straight at his face. Silently she reviews the training—how to put your body into a swing to get maximum impact, how to defend if attacked from behind
—thank you Max—
and the elevator stops
—has it only been ten seconds—
and the doors open. She hesitates, she knows he won’t move first, doesn’t want to force the issue, walks out, takes the third hall. Behind her, perhaps ten feet, he follows. She curses the silent carpet, checks his position as they move. He maintains the distance and she maintains her pace, stifles the urge to run. She passes doors—so does he. Only ten more feet left
—only my door and the fire escape left—
and no more doubt now, only fear she’ll screw this up. Her hand hangs down, forgotten, keys extended, as she plans her response
—Father don’t let me forget what to do—
the adrenaline begins to flow down her fingers; she stops planning stops thinking stops everything but movement and just listens
—red and silver hell, he’s still moving—
and her key is in the door, it’s turning, and she’s tense because this is the most dangerous part, sings out “Hey, Mary!”
—please somebody please be here—
and the door is closing behind her with a bang, because all doors here open and close like the crack of doom but she’s safe and has to shake out the adrenaline, or maybe she just shakes, and rubs out the key prints on her palms. Much later, she wonders why it never occurred to her to factor screaming into her plans.
There is one more door, across the hall, that he could have taken; one reason to be on fourth that didn’t include her, didn’t warrant the sweat chilling on her neck, didn't require her fear of what she had to do.
She listens for the next few minutes, but nothing disturbs the quiet of the hall. Far away, an elevator hums.
* * * * *
I wonder if the rest of my Workshop group will understand why the grammer is so bad--that that's how you think in that situation, without periods and pauses and punctuation marks. I wonder if they'll suggest I change certain aspects to make it more reader-friendly. I wonder if I'll tell them that I just wrote it exactly as it happened, that it's not fiction at all.Probably not. But I'll know.
What a strange place I'm in.
In my mind, I mean.

On the flipside, I got my MCAT score back. Apparently there's some big umbrella of silence that hangs over what the actual number is; not that I care. I'm well aware that there are many, many people who are smarter than me, and it doesn't bother me because I'm not competative. At all, maybe somewhat. And as much as I enjoy a righteous arguement, for the sake of peace I bow to convention and will not volunteer what I got--but I'm smiling a lot these days. It's so good to be done! I'm so pleased.
So now I'm scratching my head wondering, "Where do I go from here?"
No, but seriously, where do I go? Loma Linda had Adventists. It also has a whopping brutal price tag. Compared to the D.O. school in my hometown. Which has no Adventists. (The Adventist deal is mostly based on the Adventist men, among whom my mother hopes I will meet up with my future intended. Which is a worthy cause, but still, I'm not sure the slim chance is worth $40,000 a year). And then...there are still other schools. So, where do I go from here?
I Relient K song.
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