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It's 2015, summertime, with an afternoon sunshine gently roasting the cheeks of a little girl into a healthy flush. The sweet sanctuary of the cafe after school; a fresh playground amidst the summer heat. Familiarity, an endless finality of every poster and notice memorised through timeless hours, teaching her how to read through adverts for baby sitters ballet instructors late-night knitting groups. School tie discarded, slung over the back of a squeaky cafe chair, the usual, she drags her mum to the counter, towards the fiery face smiling behind the till. Warm eyes, sparkling with stories and life, already talking to her mum about her new school teacher the new muffin recipe her dad's latest gig. Her face, bronzed by foreign heat folds as she guffaws across the cafe, careless, laughing , at a joke the little girl doesn't yet understand. Handfuls of pink marshmallows, sweet and pure, exchange hands with a wink and a 'don't tell your mum'. The girl sticks two together and calls them butterflies. The broken clock near the door shows the same time as it did an hour ago, hands suspended, never-ending. I carry flowers, an expensive bunch of lilies and roses, tilted in towards my chest - like a child in a green paper blanket - to protect them against the gale as I carry sympathy home. The rain soaks through the paper. I nip off a dead leaf between my forefinger and thumb, thoughts lingering, nose turning numb. Four years since I spoke to Mandy, at 'Mandy's Cafe!' whisked away by time briskly slipping. Moving house, growing up. And yet, when the sun comes out later today, I see a little girl with scooter-hit ankles, and glitter in her hair reaching out a tiny ink-stained hand for a warm buttered roll from a hand memorised through timeless hours.
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Feb 23, 2025
Feb 23, 2025 at 2:43 PM UTC
Marshmallow Dust
It's 2015, summertime, with an afternoon sunshine gently roasting the cheeks of a little girl into a healthy flush. The sweet sanctuary of the cafe after school; a fresh playground amidst the summer heat. Familiarity, an endless finality of every poster and notice memorised through timeless hours, teaching her how to read through adverts for baby sitters ballet instructors late-night knitting groups. School tie discarded, slung over the back of a squeaky cafe chair, the usual, she drags her mum to the counter, towards the fiery face smiling behind the till. Warm eyes, sparkling with stories and life, already talking to her mum about her new school teacher the new muffin recipe her dad's latest gig. Her face, bronzed by foreign heat folds as she guffaws across the cafe, careless, laughing , at a joke the little girl doesn't yet understand. Handfuls of pink marshmallows, sweet and pure, exchange hands with a wink and a 'don't tell your mum'. The girl sticks two together and calls them butterflies. The broken clock near the door shows the same time as it did an hour ago, hands suspended, never-ending. I carry flowers, an expensive bunch of lilies and roses, tilted in towards my chest - like a child in a green paper blanket - to protect them against the gale as I carry sympathy home. The rain soaks through the paper. I nip off a dead leaf between my forefinger and thumb, thoughts lingering, nose turning numb. Four years since I spoke to Mandy, at 'Mandy's Cafe!' whisked away by time briskly slipping. Moving house, growing up. And yet, when the sun comes out later today, I see a little girl with scooter-hit ankles, and glitter in her hair reaching out a tiny ink-stained hand for a warm buttered roll from a hand memorised through timeless hours.
annashanley
Written by
18/F/Scotland
Feb 23, 2025
Feb 23, 2025 at 2:43 PM UTC
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