By Shan Ellis
Irish Coffee
She was
staring out of the window again, looking lackadaisically at the browning leaves
dancing and clinging on to dear life on their mothering twigs.
“It won’t
bring him back, I’m sorry but it won’t”
I’m sure
the apathy in my voice sounded forced, perhaps even faked, but I couldn’t help
it.
I was
hurting too.
He had been
my friend, the only one I could rely on since childhood. I’d had more than a
little touch of the green eyed monster when he’d introduced me to the petite
brunette who now sat zombie-like in the armchair with a cup of
almost-too-cold-to-drink tea. She was too docile, too cow-eyed, far too weak for
him.
Parting her
lips as if to say something, I clung blindly to the silence that hung between
us. Both mourning over the same man in very different ways.
“He’s not
gone,”she
whispered throatily.
Too
right.
Turned my
back on her and headed for the whisky in the kitchen cabinet.
Stupid
little girl.
“God damn
you” I hissed to the ether. Hoping that he was around to hear me. At that moment
in time it hurt so much just to think. I knew why I was so furious.
She
wasn’t me.
Shan's Biog:
Shan Ellis is a freelance writer from the foothills of Snowdonia, now living in Norfolk. She is currently studying for a BA in creative writing and literature with the Open University. A published novellist and poet, you can find more of her work at www.repressedsoul.wordpress.com
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