Lucy
Oliver
Espresso
Alice stared at the porch, newly built and smelling of fresh wood
shavings. Above it workmen had nailed bright red slates that gleamed in vivid
crimson under the sunlight.
The people who had bought the burnt out shell never saw the
yellow-red flames that haunted Alice’s dreams.
She heard a thud and turned, seeing her husband kick a beam
lying in the grass, his hand touching the pocket where he had once kept
cigarettes.
They had never returned, until today.
“It’s time,” she had told him and Phil nodded, understanding
her.
Resting a hand on her stomach, Alice wandered around the
garden gazing intently at the flowerbeds she had tended. It seemed strange to
her that the plants remained unchanged. Leaning down, she touched the grass,
tracing her fingers through the wet spikes, touching where her hands last clutched.
She drew a sharp breath hoping that the scent of talc and raspberry shampoo had
somehow lingered through the year of rain.
She remembered watching Ella riding her bike across the
grass. It was past dinnertime and crossly opening the white framed window, she
had shouted, “You’re late!”
Ella threw her cycle to the ground.
“Pick it up,” Alice said.
“After dinner!” Ella said, jumping up the porch steps.
They had shared a big dish of pasta, the family of three,
before Alice tucked Ella into her bed.
“Sleep well my darling,” she said.
She and Phil dozed in the lounge.
On the back porch, the cigarette must have started
smouldering.
The fire fighters pulled them out.
“Just in time,” the man said, putting a plastic mask across
her face.
She formed the word, ‘Ella,’ with scorched lips, but her
throat had swollen and no sound emerged.
They found the child twenty minutes later, peaceful and
asleep. Never to wake.
Ella, always late.
Snowdrops now nestled in the grass, opening tiny white heads
over the familiar earth. Minute springs of soft, pale new grass emerged. Alice
felt a kick - hard and alive - against her belly, then a tightening under her
abdomen. Pressing her lips together, she rubbed her stomach, winching as the
sharp cramps clenched deep into her body, accepting them as both a penance and a
gift.
Turning, she saw Phil looking at her and recognised the
expression in his eyes; the look she knew filled her own. He was her emotional
mirror image - the only one who hurt as she did, who could possibly understand
how she felt.
He came over and placed his warm hand against her midriff.
Her womb contracted at his touch and she moaned. Rocking on her heels, she
inhaled the sweet scent of flowers from the garden until the pain began to ease.
“It’s time,” Phil said. “We have to go.”
Alice wiped her cheeks and leant down to touch the ground
once more.“Good
bye, my darling,” she said. “We miss you.”
Bio:
Lucy Oliver is published in Take a
Break and Stories for Children magazines, as well as various anthologies. She
won Stylist magazine's Micro Fiction competition and is currently working on a
historical novel.
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