by Mitzi Danielson-Kaslik
warm cherri
I woke up. My eyes tired fatigued and weary, though I knew I had slept
for hours. I was laying on the ground, face down in my lace white night dress.
The ground felt oddly crisp beneath my form and it was not long before it came
to me that I could not be in my bed anymore. There was no light streaming in
from the cracks between the threadbare midnight blue curtains and he was no
longer beside me so it could not be my bed; our bed. Perhaps he had awoken early
if it was dawn to have a cigarette or if it was still the middle of the night,
perhaps he hadn’t yet joined me in bed. But then it came it to me that it
certainly didn’t seem like either dawn or the middle of the night, in fact, the
light that swam into view around me was neither light or dark; it was an odd
grey. Opening my eyes wider, I realised that the floor beneath me was cold and
crisp in a way I had never felt before and was in fact comprised of bones. Old
bones which, though not decayed and pearly white, were evidently ancient by how
filthy and dry they were. I gingerly rose to my bare feet. It took me a moment
to fully understand my surrounds; tall trees unlike any I had ever seen before;
a yellowish grey sky which somewhat resembled a sunset; and it did not take me
long to notice that the flooring of bones stretched for miles around. What a
perplexing place to find myself. I stepped on the unsteady ground carefully,
fearful it’d fall in at any moment towards the largest of the leafless trees
which stood, stretching to the heavens before me. Then it dawned on me: was I
dead? Was this the afterlife? Had I been taken in the
night?
Wiping these thoughts from my mind, I reached out a shaking hand to touch
the tree, wondering if it felt as it did in the garden of The House of the
Rising Sun. Oddly, it did. The twisting bark was cold beneath my finger tips and
gnarled up and up for dearth than I could see with my tired eyes. It was then
that I realised there was no sound until this moment as the call of a raven
shattered the cold silence with the pieces laying on the floor. Though I could
not see the bird it’d emanated from. As I ran my hand over the tree trunk, I
noticed a change in the wood, from the wood of the tree to a different lighter
wood with a soft finish that glistened in the light. It was a door, with a
bronzed lock and raven’s head knocker. What was it doing in a tree? If this was
a tree. I reached to pull the door open but found it was locked. I then knocked
on the door with the ring hanging from the raven’s mouth sharply three times and
to my surprise, the tree which held it stooped down and cast a branched hand
over the lock. The door opened towards me without a human touch and possibly
against my better judgement, I stepped through it and onto a crimson carpeted
floor. My glance fleeted across the carpet and I realised as I looked up the
ceiling was high and the corridor stretched, as the bones had, forever. I
couldn’t be inside the tree. Turning back, I noted that the door had vanished and
in its place was a black and white photograph with faded blurred edges of a
young woman in a long dress and hat outside a small chapel with a sign marked
Little Woods Lafayette Chapel. Her hair seemed to blow in the wind, frozen in
time. She reminded me of someone and as I looked at her smile, I realised it was
my mother. She must have been young in that photograph. I hadn’t seen her in so
long and I wondered if I ever would again.
Did she keep her smile or did I take it with
me?
Looking back to the corridor, I realised that there were many wooden
doors with raven knockers all along the cream walls. The wall paper was
familiar, it was the same as in The House of the Rising Sun. Looking closer, I
realised the carpet was the same as the carpet of the staircase. I tiptoed along
the corridor. “Hello? Is anybody here?” I called into the nothingness. There was
no response. I edged along the corridor until I came to the first door. Rapping
on the door nervously, it opened before me at once and I saw my mother, older
now than she had been in the photograph brushing the dark hair of a little girl
beside a sewing machine. Me. Her first daughter. She looked happy. I closed the
door and the room faded away and the door vanished from view. Second door opened
to revile her holding a baby who was crying. I was nowhere to be seen. Behind
the third door was a girl, older then the little brunette in the first room
studying quietly. Alone. She looked sad though she was clearly engrossed in her
work, thinking it best not to disturb her, I closed the door quietly and
preceded to look behind the next door, perplexed as to the purpose of it all. It
was a rather more upsetting image of my father leaving the apartment. He never
came back, I didn’t need a door to tell me that. Assuming that was behind the
fourth door, I passed it. Opening the fifth door, I saw myself as a teenager in
shorts and an old shirt beside a big top at the Willows Carnival. I knew when
this was, it was the day I met him. And sure enough, he walked into the image
with Alex and Parker beside him in their leather jackets. He was seventeen. Not
that it mattered. As the vision moved I saw as talking alone and him telling me
his address so we could write to each other. I smiled to myself. I didn’t want
to leave this vision. But it disappeared regardless. The next door held a
bedroom with me hurriedly writing letters. This couldn’t have been long before I
had come to The House for I saw my school rucksack packed to leave under the
bed.
Was I here for a reason or just to look back through the strange memories
and broken fantasies?
If this was someone’s idea of a joke, I’d like them to stop now. It
wasn’t remotely funny. I didn’t want to continue along the corridor as I could
be sure of the events that followed but some unknown force compelled me. Perhaps
it was the same unknown force that silently blew the leafless trees. Continuing
down the path, I opened the next door and was in no way surprised by what I saw:
myself in my school uniform on the train to The House. I looked happy and dewy
eyed, my rucksack on top of my lap. A new vision swam into view as the train
chugged out of view; him. Picking me up from the station. Hair slicked back and
dressed in his suit, though he didn’t have his blazer because it was May. The
car drove him and me to The House. I remember the first time I saw the house;
gothic and eerie yet oddly comforting, it represented a dream of love and
adventure. The gates were always open and this was the first time I had passed
through them. I wanted to join that vision, it was perfect. It was the first
time in my life for a very long time that I had been happy. Truly happy. But as
I began to step towards the gates, the force pushed me away and the door
slammed. The next vision was of a wonderful party with twinkling lights and a
carousel in the gardens of The House. The moths – guests- came and went from the
sparkling champagne tables and desks lined with canopies and cocktails in
brightly coloured outfits and there was me, drinking quietly as he played cards
at one of the circular tables. He had a cigarette in his hand as he always did.
The loud sounds of music and of idol gossip tore through the air and I had found
myself needing him to protect me from the night. I didn’t want to see this
anymore. I slammed the door shut. The next was of me and Him intertwined in a
passionate embrace. That was one of my favourite visions.
Unfortunately from this vision on, the scene turned much more sour with
Grace fighting with Alex and Parker telling me of all the things that have
happened in The House of the Rising Sun. I was so disbelieving when Parker had
told me of the gambling and drinking that’d happened there and I was almost
brought to tears as he told me of how Alex had ruined the old curtains fighting
with Grace after he found out about what she’d do with Jordan and I began to
wonder if the monsters that live in The House were really Gods at all. As the
scene changed again I saw myself staring blankly into the future. Grace hung
there. Motionless. In a small clearing a few minutes away from The House of the
Rising Sun. she was suspended into the nothingness and it did not take me long
to realise that she was dead. Daniela-Gracie was dead. Or she was going it die.
At seventeen. I shook this vision from my head and it changed to Him holding my
still and the rest of the scene was too awful to detail. I screamed. I screamed
again but no help came and suddenly, everything was gone. I was back in my
bedroom. With Him. Alone. He was sleeping. It had all been a dream. But then it
was clear why I had visited the kingdom with the bones and the doors and the
trees. It was instructions. I must leave The House of the Rising Sun. Put one
foot on the train and go back to my mother in New Orleans to wear that ball and
chain.
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