I can taste her scent, riding on the morning breeze. It is of empty swing sets; dead Autumn leaves. It is unnaturally cold. She is waiting for me, but I cannot find her. Summer has fled my skin. I sink with each step. I cry out, but my mouth stays closed. I cannot find her. I cannot find her. I cannot—
I am staring into a convenience store. Gaudy labels, bright neon. The air smells of soy sauce and sweat. A foreign sun blinds me. Lucy’s father is waiting for his receipt, hand stretched for eternity. I want to scream out. I want to run up to him and shake him loose of the death that will consume him and his family. But all I can do is sink; hand stretched for eternity.
I am crying. There is a luggage bag in the hallway, clothes strewn to its side. Mother is shouting, but she does not know it. ‘Ten more years’, she says, ‘ten more years’. I have never seen father so angry. I don’t want to watch. I want to disappear. I want to sink into the walls. My existence has led to this moment; this moment that I will not understand for another eight years. ‘Ten more years.’ Mother slams the door. An engine starts, but I am gone.