Astral
Ginny Ratcliffe
Absinthe
The
first moments of dawn brought with it a breeze strong enough to shunt a passing
seagull off course, its outstretched wings blending in with the final few
moments of a pinkish moon. The bird made towards land, its reflection gliding
across the sea, rippling, following.
***
The
screeching of brake pads pressing against hot rubber filled the morning air as
a Ford Escort M1, that had seen better days, came to an abrupt halt at the edge
of a cliff.
Renee wasn't sure what to do now
she'd come this far. She was still getting her mind round why she was here in
the first place. The sun was threatening to rise and she rolled the window down
to take in the sea air. She spent a few moments, breathing in, out, and
mentally engineering a ploy to destroy the solar system, if only it meant she
could just rest her eyes. Just a bit of peace, a minute for her mind to... be.
A little stolen time.
Instead, she reached for the
glove compartment and pulled out her sunglasses, hooking them on her t-shirt.
Life was all about making do, right? Plus, she figured, you can't go wrong in
Ray-bans. And if you did, well; at least you'd be a suave looking mistake.
She paused for a moment, tracing
her finger down the pile of tapes that were stacked by the gear stick. Her
memory threw weak grappling hooks to thoughts of better days. She contemplated
the weirdness … no, the strength of the mind, of how one song can transport you
back in time.
She
shut her eyes and felt green grass around her toes. Her bitten nail came to a
halt on a particular cassette, her eyelids rose, and she remembered.
Back
in the day it was all fields and making out, summer fayres and alcohol – decks,
sex and electro. She missed the high pitched twangs of the top E, skittering
around her ears like electric mosquito's in the breeze. She longed for the hot,
wet summer days climbing over rocks in streams, sleeping under trees and walking
home barefoot covered in pollen, the soles of her feet black with dirt and
bruises. She still had the odd scar, and looked upon them as old friends.
Scattered remnants of better days, a bloody map of teenage adventures, silvery
lines of a life long since lost, but not forgotten.
Renee
removed the keys from their leather and steel encasing, turned up the radio,
and exited the car. The sun was casting long shadows across bits of battered
tarmac, catching itself in nooks and pebbles, leaving parts of itself behind on
its long stretch to the bottom of the cliff.
As the door swung shut, she
glanced at her other self in the wing mirror. Ivory skin, freckles dotting
around her face and straying over the lines of her lip, long auburn ringlets
wrapped around each other in some eternal tangle that she'd never quite been
able to tame. Turquoise eyes peered out of their reflective prison, golden
flecks tinting them green in one continuous circular wave, like spilled
champagne on the surf.
She dragged her trainers on the
walk to the boot, scuffing lines into the dirt, contemplating, as she lifted
the door.
Removing
the sunglasses from her t-shirt, she brushed away an auburn ringlet and placed
them over the docile green eyes of the limp, crumpled body in front of her. A
pale, almost opaque arm lay over its chest. Renee's eyebrows faltered as she
leaned over and gazed upon a girl she once knew, so well. A tear escaped her
eye and trailed down her cheek, landing on the girls face, from one freckled
maze to another. The reflection in the Ray-Bans was of someone she didn't
particular know any more. She bent down and pulled the laces from her boots,
held them up to trail in the breeze, then swung her leg backwards, forwards,
and kicked off her shoes, straight over the edge of the cliff.
The sun was almost fully risen as
Renee walked around to the front of the car, sat inside, turned up the radio
and released the handbrake.
***
The
seagull lifted his head out of the foaming water, a small black fish in his
mouth as a great metal lump came plummeting towards the rocks. Pushing his feet
off the wet sand, he flew to a higher distance and in the process, dropped his
dinner. The fish fell through the air and straight into the birds watery
reflection, causing the wings to part in obscure circular ripples.
Footprint marks trailed up the
beach, followed by various metallic nuts and bolts, and the gull watched as a
bare, bloody foot disappeared behind a rock; then turned back to his now
peaceful reflection.
Author Bio
Ginny Ratcliffe is a
21-year-old Creative Writing student from Yorkshire, i.e. that place that looks
a bit like The Shire but with less hobbits. She can often be found in dark
corners and/or record shops questioning reality, or attempting to show her
friends how she can psychically guess the contents of a Kinder Egg without even
opening it.
She enjoys writing
prose and screen plays, and has a slightly unhealthy obsession with Hacker the
Dog off CBBC. Her favourite authors are the whimsical masterminds Terry
Pratchett and Neil Gaiman.
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