--
The hospital walls are familiar to him in that all hospital walls are the same.
Cold, bleak, sterile. They promise nothing of happiness. They are as empty as
the death that they oversee. The absence of anything in the neutral colors leads
to thoughts of fear, thoughts of losing a part of your soul that you can't live
without. It makes your mood serious, the terror that the building instills
forcing you to choose what you will strive for no matter what turn the patient
takes. It tends to make you realize what's really important. What you really
want.
Ephram's grandfather once asked that of
him. "What do you want?" he said. Ephram decided it then and he holds to it now.
He wants Amy.
"I'm here for my dad," he had told her.
And that is true; he is. But his father's in surgery, and he looks now at her,
sitting nervously, close to him. He feels for her so deeply that he thinks he
might throw up. The tension in the air is displayed in her face.
She can't sit still. She laces her fingers
together and apart over and over again, glancing at the clock every thirty
seconds. She doesn't talk; doesn't want to. Maybe she can't.
Nobody talks, really. Once in a great
while, someone will stand up and ask if anyone would like a soda, while they
take a trip to the machines. Nobody ever requests one, and the person who left
almost always comes back empty-handed. They don't want a soda, either. They
don't want anything, except the boy on the operating table. The silence
stretches on in a hellishly taunting way, fear clinging to Ephram's body,
dragging his heart down to the floor.
He has faith in his father. But fate
overrides even the best of surgeons. You cannot save those who are not meant to
be saved. They are taken from you no matter what you do. No matter how much you
need them in order to survive yourself.
He cares for Colin; that much is true.
He pictures Amy being in Colin's place,
her survival balancing on the edge of a knife. And suddenly he can hardly
breathe.
She's strong. She's a fighter. She keeps
things well hidden. But he looks at her, and somehow he sees. She's broken, the
little girl within her fighting to surface. Her loyalty is destroying her.
Losing her boyfriend to a car crash, then watching him spiral downwards and
seeming to lose him again. Tougher people have cried about lesser things.
In some ways, he and Colin are a lot
alike. Ephram, tortured by the death of Mom; Colin, tortured by the death of
self. And what do they both need to save them? Amy.
He knows what's obvious to everyone else.
He'll never have her. She tells him what he knows is true: that he should move
on.
But, move on? Please. That's one of the
most impossible things anyone's ever asked of him. Move on from a girl who just
possibly might be the most amazing person he's ever met? Sure, yeah. He'll get
right on that.
He's still a stranger to her, in some
ways. He's different, she says. Different.
That's something.
Sure, he could let go of her, watch her
stray away. It's not like it would crush him, slash him up, make him feel like
he's been hit by a semi. Because he doesn't need her so much it hurts inside.
Because he doesn't hum that Al Green song to himself whenever he misses her
face. Because he doesn't feel like he would die without her, and he doesn't
wonder how he survived alone this far.
---
He thinks of the hum of the piano in his
head. Sleek black and white keys under the pads of his fingers. Music leads
entry to the soul. Music cues a dancer's steps. Amy's dancing steps.
He watches her in his mind, watches her
move and sway, her feet dictating the beat; her arms writing the poem.
She dances alone, her solo heart singing,
never to be caught. Alone, dancing, alone.
But in his dreams, she dances for him.
Only him. In his dreams, her love for Colin doesn't exist. Because it's a
boundary, impossible to overcome. Colin's place beside her takes Ephram's place
away.
He can remember so clearly that night he
was drunk because of the sting of how she pushed him away. The ceiling swirled,
above his bed, dangerously spinning at warp speed, like on that ride at Six
Flags that scared Delia so much. Gravity sucks you so viciously on that ride
that you feel like your skin might peel right off your body. That's what drunk
feels like to him. Yeah. A roller coaster ride in which one second you want to
sing out that you love the world, and in the next, you have to fight so hard not
to cry. A force that pulls at you from two opposite directions so hard that you
can't wait to split in two just so the painful sensation will stop.
Life, magnified.
The nausea that accompanied him that
night, while he laid on his bed and counted the small dots on the plaster of his
ceiling, is what he feels now. It wasn't this bad that night. Nausea could never
be as bad as it is now, in a hospital, as he sits on an impossibly uncomfortable
chair.
But he still felt it. He felt so much that
night; so much that he can't even remember all of it. But he knows that all the
feeling was there. He remembers the outline, but can't color it in.
He saw her, though. When his eyelids
fluttered down over his vision, sealing away the world outside. He could still
feel the spin within his body, the energy in his veins. Everything was at high
speed, charging through his senses relentlessly. It felt like he was moving even
as he lay still. He felt out of control, and in that moment, when he swears he
might have spontaneously combusted, he saw her amid the darkness of his closed
eyes.
Dancing, just for him.
--
Butterfly, oh butterfly
Fly away
You're trapped in this prison
This prison in your head
Grow wings and fly away
Or die slowly forever
--
She's so graceful, he imagines. Balancing
up on her toes, leaping this way and that, her skirt flying amid her, the soft
material of her shoes shimmering under a spotlight. On a stage, in an empty
building. Her somber music carries her through the story that she creates on her
own. From the beginning stages of morning, she dances with flowing choreography,
through to the cringing pain of dramatically falling in the moonlight.
She is such a vision; an angel in a white
leotard, satin slippers laced up her ankle. A lost girl, finding herself among
the soft notes of the song in her memory. Her movements precise, and practiced.
Her face a doorway to her emotions. A lonely, dancing ballerina. Tragically
beautiful. Dying inside.
The dancing girl, the wilting flower, the
suffocating heart that fades away.
---
He thinks he may be in love with her. He
doesn't know for sure. Anyway, it doesn't matter. She's entrusted her soul to
someone else. And he suspects her loyalty will sustain forever. It's the kind of
girl she is. Her strength, her persistence, is everlasting.
He watches her as she watches Colin, day
after day after day.
We should all be so lucky as to be loved
unselfishly, he thinks; so much, when we're not even conscious; when our eyes
aren't even open to what we have. We should all be so lucky as to be loved by
her. Sunshine, rainbows, smiles that extend to the eyes with a sparkle that is a
window to what happiness lives inside, all things that feel good and are
beautiful... all of it is her. She's... she's Ephram's dream girl. She is so
beautiful, so very many things, all of which compel him to entertain such
thoughts, mushy gooey inner love prose.
It's so stupid. She has no idea how in
over his head he is for her. He thinks she purposefully ignores it because she
doesn't want to know. She doesn't want to deal with the complications of letting
her guard down when she needs those walls of protection the most.
She is illusive; forbidden. She's Amy.
She'll leave a satin ribbon tied around his memory, whether he gets her love and
closeness or not.
But oh, how he wants it. The constant
longing is tiresome. It hurts; it echoes through his soul with her every
brush-off, every time she walks away. Every time she averts her eyes to look at
anything else but him.
She avoids him, but he can't hate her. If
he were in her position, wouldn't he do the same?
She can be so cruel, but still... she is
his everything. The only girl he wants to love always. It could never be simple
with her. And the fact that a relationship with her would be a lot of work - -
the fact that he's ready to tackle that, makes his want for her all the more
real. For all that he'll have to be willing to do, he can't wait to give it a
shot. He wants the package, everything, both good and bad, that comes with the
privilege of being with her.
Of knowing her. Eternally.
It's worth it; he knows that... it's worth
it. He wants it. He really, truly does.
She's not ready yet. But it's so
important... he'll wait.
He'll wait, just as he's waiting now,
right by her side. The hours tick on forever. The clocks drum their silent beat,
cruel enough to stay so slow that he feels like screaming for her, for Amy.
Because he knows she needs to but never will. She stays so composed on the
outside, but there are give-aways.
Her hands no longer touch one another, but
her foot taps rhythmically on the waiting room floor, her leg bouncing, the
small amount of noise booming through Ephram's head as if it were a countdown to
a bomb explosion. But then, maybe that is what's coming, after all.
There is half a Twix bar in its wrapper,
on the floor next to his feet. He stares down at it, and begins to lightly kick
it to-and-fro between his two feet that are coming close to falling asleep. A
part of him craves that pain, that pricking needle sensation, that would occupy
his thoughts in some way. He wants anything, anything, to take him away from
this constant worrying and fretting, this wait that gets more and more
impossible to bear the longer they are all forced to bear it.
The Twix wrapper makes a slight noise, the
plastic-like material tearing just slightly. It jars Amy from her foot-pounding
crescendo, and she turns her head. Feeling her eyes on him, Ephram slowly raises
his head to peek at her out of the corner of his eye.
He doesn't have the nerve to look at her
and let her see that he does have some shadow of a doubt brewing in his
pessimistic mind. Maybe his father can't do this. Maybe no one ever can.
He wants to say something to her. He wants
to tell her he loves her, right here and now. She needs someone to do something
to save her from this long-stretched torture, from these never-ending minutes on
a clock. He turns to her, and she turns away.
He opens his mouth to speak, and is
interrupted as his dad enters the room.
Amy sucks in her breath, and stands, as
does everyone else in the room.
At first, Ephram thought he might die from
the waiting that lasted forever. But as he swallows hard, and seems to sway on
his feet, he's suddenly not ready for the waiting to be over. No matter the
answer, he doesn't know if he's ready to know.
He doesn't know if he's ready, inside, to
face the news that is coming. To face the death his father might bring. He
doesn't know how he'll help Amy, if Colin has died.
Doesn't know if he's ready to watch as the
news leaves her broken, taking away all her strength, rendering everything she's
held onto useless. He doesn't want to have to see her wishing that she had died,
too.
His father opens his mouth to speak, and
Ephram closes his eyes. Sometimes he doesn't know what he believes in, but in
that moment he says a prayer to God, to save her, because Ephram, himself,
cannot; save her from what is to come.
--
Dancing angel of my dreams... you still my
heart, and... you take my breath away.
- -
end