by
Bronte Pearson
elderflower cordial
He remembers when the flowers pinched the grass and sang the
biographies of the bees with each hiccup of the wind. He’d run into the field
with his sister and float through the daisies like bubbles and then plop right
into the flowers’ big yellow eyes while jesting about who could run quicker and
who was their mama’s favorite.
Polly had been born
seven minutes after him. Every movement and sound she made reminded the world
that she would always be seven minutes behind him. Her brain didn’t move as
swiftly as his, and her understanding of the world was tangled like a plate of
spaghetti. That’s how their mama always tried to explain her differences; she
had a spaghetti brain while everyone else had a waffle brain, and that was okay
because spaghetti was just as delicious, if not more. They just tasted a little
different.
Nothing kept Polly
from enjoying the world, despite her differences. His best memories were because
Polly made life vivacious and free. She blew with the wind and breathed like the
trees. She gave life to every soul who knew her, especially
him.
Things were different
now though. Life had been simpler when they could run free in the fields and
play hopscotch on the driveway. Now, the world had spun backwards. Chaos ensued
after the evil of the world was tempted out of hiding in the name of politics,
and now they were under attack for simply existing. Their mama never told them
exactly who was out to exterminate them, and perhaps that was the fault that led
to Polly’s death.
Polly didn’t
understand why the sky boomed in the distance and why everyone ran after the
fact. She couldn’t comprehend that people existed who failed to see the treasure
within a human heart. She was a helper and a nurturer, so the moment she saw
that tangerine splatter in the distance, on the one day they decided to sneak
out of the house while their mama ran errands, she ran towards it to tell the
plane to stop. She thought it would listen. It didn’t.
He couldn’t run after
her in time. Polly ran like a swarm of ants out of a hill towards the flood of
people trying to escape the explosion. She thought she saw someone trapped in
the flames, so she ran to help. He couldn’t save her.
After Polly died, he
stopped paying attention. The world had taken the most special person in the
universe, and after the fact, it may as well have stopped
turning.
Now, he looks out
across the rubble that used to be their hometown. Weeks have passed now since
the bombing ended. People are dead, literally and figuratively, tossed up in the
debris that used to be homes or schools or shops. Only a select few remained.
The rest were exposed into what they really were—a conglomeration of brick,
cement, and wood that now dotted the landscape like needles. The airstrikes
certainly didn’t end after Polly’s death. They kept coming until everything was
demolished. Luckily, most of the townspeople had been safely evacuated in time
after the first couple of strikes. They were lucky and unlucky, all at
once.
They are back in town
now. He walks through the debris with his mama, sorting through the wreckage in
the hopes of finding old pictures and keepsakes. That’s all anyone could do
anymore. They all just looked.
He stops flipping
through insulation for a moment to look out toward the field where he and Polly
used to play. The flowers and the grass are gone, and the trees that lined the
outskirts of the field are strewn about the dirt. The earth has been raped of
its beauty, and it lies vulnerably for everyone to be reminded that not all the
earth’s creations are beautiful. Some creatures survive for
destruction.
He closes his eyes
and tries to picture the flowers and Polly’s face giggling among them. He feels
warm tears swallow his cheeks. He opens his eyes, shakes off the image, and
begins sifting through the wreckage to take his mind off the
horror.
After collecting what
they could for the day, he decides to take a walk. There is no fear of
destruction now that all has been destroyed, so his mama lets him go. He wanders
through the sea of debris and watches as other families collect whatever
belongings they can salvage. He admires the pain on their faces. He knows he
shouldn’t feel delighted to see their broken hearts, but it reminds him that he
isn’t alone, and that somehow makes things better.
In the middle of what
used to be the road, he stumbles upon a can of spray paint. He picks up the can
and wipes the dirt from the nozzle. The can is dented on the left side, but the
weight of it says there is still some paint left. He was never artistic, but the
can seemed to be something worth keeping. It had survived the
devastation.
He takes the can and
hugs it as he runs as fast as he can past the families in the neighborhood. He
hopes no one will stop him and claim that it is theirs. This was his beacon of
hope. No one can take that from him.
Once he gets far
enough to the outskirts of the town where few people are wandering about, he
stops running, squatting to catch his breath, and he once again observes the
can. He looks ahead and notices half of a wall standing. He can’t tell if the
building had once been a home or a business, but he figures it doesn’t matter.
Nothing belongs to anybody anymore. Not really.
He approaches the
wall and stares at the ash in the crevices of the brick. He hates the ash for
being there. He knows it was a product of Polly’s demise. It couldn’t help but
to have been born of the explosions, but he hated it all the
same.
“Polly didn’t deserve
this,” he scolds the ash.
He lifts the spray
paint, presses the stiff nozzle, and moves it in shaky lines until a black
flower paints the surface.
He steps back and
admires the flower and pretends it is Polly. Now, she would be the central focus
of the wall. Her memory was a far more important symbol of what happened than
the ash that colored the cracks. Behind the wall lies horror, but amid it, the
flower shines, and if he stares long enough, the world becomes a little more
beautiful again.
He smiles and begins
making his journey back to his mama, spray painting flowers on all the remaining
walls along the way. He swears he won’t stop until he can resurrect Polly’s
field.
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