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Isolde stands at the window of her old room. Her mother and sister sit around the small white table, talking to Tristana. Cobwebs hang from the metal curtain rail, a dead spider hangs like a dead parachutist, a dried up fly on the white painted windowsill. The first few days out of the asylum seem odd, seem to unbalance her. Tristana seems engaging well with her icy mother, her sister looks on anxiously. My room, she had told Tristana. My bed, she had added pointing to the bed pushed against a wall. In the asylum, some weeks back, she and Tristana had ****** The fat nurse had caught them and reported. There had been giggles and guffaws in the staff room afterwards. Now she and Tristana were free, government clearout, new policy, economical necessities. She stares at her mother’s head move from side to side, her jaw opening and closing like the shark she was. Just a quick visitation, she said. Her mother’s eyes and mouth opened with shock when they turned up. Not staying, she had informed. Visiting the once, she had said. Her mother seemed relieved, her sister white as a sheet, nodded her head like some cheap doll. The room was cold, colder than before. She’d been taken from here those years back, screaming, held between men in white, out into the cold night. Be gone soon, she mutters, rubbing a finger down the pane of glass, making a rude noise, all heads turn toward her room from the garden below. Goodbye old room, time for us to go.
0
Dec 14, 2012
Dec 14, 2012 at 8:13 AM UTC
JUST THE ONE VISIT.
Isolde stands at the window of her old room. Her mother and sister sit around the small white table, talking to Tristana. Cobwebs hang from the metal curtain rail, a dead spider hangs like a dead parachutist, a dried up fly on the white painted windowsill. The first few days out of the asylum seem odd, seem to unbalance her. Tristana seems engaging well with her icy mother, her sister looks on anxiously. My room, she had told Tristana. My bed, she had added pointing to the bed pushed against a wall. In the asylum, some weeks back, she and Tristana had ****** The fat nurse had caught them and reported. There had been giggles and guffaws in the staff room afterwards. Now she and Tristana were free, government clearout, new policy, economical necessities. She stares at her mother’s head move from side to side, her jaw opening and closing like the shark she was. Just a quick visitation, she said. Her mother’s eyes and mouth opened with shock when they turned up. Not staying, she had informed. Visiting the once, she had said. Her mother seemed relieved, her sister white as a sheet, nodded her head like some cheap doll. The room was cold, colder than before. She’d been taken from here those years back, screaming, held between men in white, out into the cold night. Be gone soon, she mutters, rubbing a finger down the pane of glass, making a rude noise, all heads turn toward her room from the garden below. Goodbye old room, time for us to go.
terry-collett
Written by
Dec 14, 2012
Dec 14, 2012 at 8:13 AM UTC
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