Song of Solemnity
Author's Note
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She was, perhaps, aware of this wizardry, and
perused her predicament at length in those wandersome afternoons by the window.
She was known to be a little moody since she was as old as the fickle first
rain of the year, when she first stepped into this house for good. The hallways
breathed anew with anticipation of life. She wasn’t even born yet, a mere
specimen being brought to life. Her mother had also been a differing strain
from the rest of the family-if family was ever the right word. In the pale hues
of the washed-out crochet of the neighborhood, the mother-daughter stuck out
like a deep, graying red.
A lizard slithers down the beam. Her mother said
lizards were bad luck.
Everything in this house had been her mother’s.
The needles she was never allowed to touch, the jewelry that was out of bounds,
the books placed too high on the shelf. She remembered how the afternoon hours
went by, and she lay staring at the golden light filtering from the barred
windows. It fell onto the forbidden volumes, it made her so curious.
The little gray houses had a park. With a
fountain. She could see it from the window in her nursery. She longed to go
there so often when her hands couldn’t reach the door knob… She didn’t want to
any more, might not have stepped outside the house for a week.
When her hands did begin to reach the door knob,
and then the latch, and her hair fell down to her thighs- it was then that she
left the house for boarding school. The quiet, shy, silly girl she once was..It
was so hard to picture her now pale and ashy complexion breaking into a pinkish
chuckle. She would play with the keys then. She still did her hair like that
little girl, tucking the strands she left out mistakenly behind her ear. She
didn’t write to her mother any more…
She came back to a house missing shingles, and a
soul. It was distant. She still failed to gauge the gaps.
Her mother was buried at the cemetery around the
corner. Her mother once told her how when she was with child, a lizard creeped
up on her from behind the foliage, and gave her a scare that resulted in
dilations, a lot of blood, and a lot of crying. She used to say nothing good
came of lizards.
The one at the beam was a few inches from the
girl’s arm now. She shooed it away.
As she moved by the hallway, she saw for the
last time, the scribbles she made in the walls as a child, the tiles of the
floor where she lay, motionless, as if in a delirium. They had lived
alone their whole lives. She couldn’t live with the ghosts of the past if she
wanted to continue the tradition.
She stepped out onto the cobbled steps where she
set paper ships on their journeys…And left the house to sing its own song of
grief, she had been in solemn harmony too long.
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