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My sister's friend broke his back when he wrecked his car. The night of, I met her, coming in from work late, she was fumbling across the gravel to her car in the dark, murmured a few words, when I asked her where she was going. Mum told me someone had called. I remembered Dad meeting me in the kitchen murmuring a few words, Making a few phone calls, late. The next day I went with her. Walking along all to familiar hospital halls. I remembered playing Amazing Grace as a woman died, her friend's eyes, glass. And the man who told me my Catgut and horsehair sounded like angel's singing. I thought it sounded hollow, empty, cold, like the corridors. The ICU hummed quietly with beeps and whispers.   His mother thanked us for coming she embraced us, pressing her soft body against our ribs. He lay there honest, disheveled. The morphine loosened his tongue. He told my sister he loved her, over and over again. "Your sister is great. Don't you just love her? I love her." he told me. She held his hand, blushing. I remembered your voice on the other end of the phone line, scattered, your tongue loose and saying anything that fell into your mouth half-formed thoughts mis-pronounced words, and a thousand impotent "Don't worry"s. He healed. Left hospital after a few weeks. My sister had to tell him she didn't love him like that. and he hated her for it. You left a few weeks after, said you loved to easily. I couldn't hate you. But I also couldn't love you like that.
0
Aug 31, 2014
Aug 31, 2014 at 3:11 AM UTC
Parallells
My sister's friend broke his back when he wrecked his car. The night of, I met her, coming in from work late, she was fumbling across the gravel to her car in the dark, murmured a few words, when I asked her where she was going. Mum told me someone had called. I remembered Dad meeting me in the kitchen murmuring a few words, Making a few phone calls, late. The next day I went with her. Walking along all to familiar hospital halls. I remembered playing Amazing Grace as a woman died, her friend's eyes, glass. And the man who told me my Catgut and horsehair sounded like angel's singing. I thought it sounded hollow, empty, cold, like the corridors. The ICU hummed quietly with beeps and whispers.   His mother thanked us for coming she embraced us, pressing her soft body against our ribs. He lay there honest, disheveled. The morphine loosened his tongue. He told my sister he loved her, over and over again. "Your sister is great. Don't you just love her? I love her." he told me. She held his hand, blushing. I remembered your voice on the other end of the phone line, scattered, your tongue loose and saying anything that fell into your mouth half-formed thoughts mis-pronounced words, and a thousand impotent "Don't worry"s. He healed. Left hospital after a few weeks. My sister had to tell him she didn't love him like that. and he hated her for it. You left a few weeks after, said you loved to easily. I couldn't hate you. But I also couldn't love you like that.
I draw strange parallels between events sometimes. I don't believe in a weird fate connection or anything, I just pick out similarities easily.
elaenor-aisling
Written by
27/F/American
Aug 31, 2014
Aug 31, 2014 at 3:11 AM UTC
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