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We would meet most Sunday mornings, always before 10 o'clock, when the dew from the night before was still blanketing the grass and the birds were still sleeping silently, the trees cracking as they awakened from their slumber and fog still hanging above the air like a burden. We would meet outside of the public house, a sign of green metal with gold lettering hung just outside the door, welcoming cyclists and families; advertising their beautiful beer garden which we would often traipse through, admiring the rose bush that the landlady planted some years ago, and sometimes stopping to run our hands through the water of the water feature which stood proudly in the corner. Brick dust would hang about the air, as we perched our bodies against the structure of the decaying wall outside the pub, holding onto each other with our faces pressed incredibly close together, your hands in my back pockets and my lips pressed firmly to yours. We'd often walk hand in hand, passing dog walkers and old couples, who would smile and say 'good morning' to us before passing on their way, and you'd always be so polite to them, and offer them smokes. You took me to a bench by Aubrey Pond one time; and you sat with me, taking my hand in your own and pressing your mouth to my cheek, "darling there is something I must tell you" you muttered and for a moment my heart froze and my brow furrowed "I leave tomorrow evening," you paused. "I won't be back." - It is only now, that six full months have passed, that I have stopped to notice the dew on the grass, and the silence of the birds and the cracking of the trees. I no longer read the gold lettering of the metal sign that hangs precariously just outside of the pub door, advertising its awfully kept garden, and rose bushes planted by a mad old woman, who paid a small fortune for a badly placed water feature. I no longer invite strangers to converse with me, and I most certainly do not acknowlegde their kind words, and I refuse to give them smokes. The couples will sneer at me abnoxiously and they will be shoved on their way, as I stare bleakly at the ground on which I walk upon, and scuff my feet against the ***** path of the frightening woodland. You took me to Aubrey Pond one time; and you sat with me, taking my hand in your own and pressing your mouth to your cheek. And I never saw you again.
0
Jun 25, 2013
Jun 25, 2013 at 2:50 PM UTC
Sunday
We would meet most Sunday mornings, always before 10 o'clock, when the dew from the night before was still blanketing the grass and the birds were still sleeping silently, the trees cracking as they awakened from their slumber and fog still hanging above the air like a burden. We would meet outside of the public house, a sign of green metal with gold lettering hung just outside the door, welcoming cyclists and families; advertising their beautiful beer garden which we would often traipse through, admiring the rose bush that the landlady planted some years ago, and sometimes stopping to run our hands through the water of the water feature which stood proudly in the corner. Brick dust would hang about the air, as we perched our bodies against the structure of the decaying wall outside the pub, holding onto each other with our faces pressed incredibly close together, your hands in my back pockets and my lips pressed firmly to yours. We'd often walk hand in hand, passing dog walkers and old couples, who would smile and say 'good morning' to us before passing on their way, and you'd always be so polite to them, and offer them smokes. You took me to a bench by Aubrey Pond one time; and you sat with me, taking my hand in your own and pressing your mouth to my cheek, "darling there is something I must tell you" you muttered and for a moment my heart froze and my brow furrowed "I leave tomorrow evening," you paused. "I won't be back." - It is only now, that six full months have passed, that I have stopped to notice the dew on the grass, and the silence of the birds and the cracking of the trees. I no longer read the gold lettering of the metal sign that hangs precariously just outside of the pub door, advertising its awfully kept garden, and rose bushes planted by a mad old woman, who paid a small fortune for a badly placed water feature. I no longer invite strangers to converse with me, and I most certainly do not acknowlegde their kind words, and I refuse to give them smokes. The couples will sneer at me abnoxiously and they will be shoved on their way, as I stare bleakly at the ground on which I walk upon, and scuff my feet against the ***** path of the frightening woodland. You took me to Aubrey Pond one time; and you sat with me, taking my hand in your own and pressing your mouth to your cheek. And I never saw you again.
carmen-noir
Written by
Jun 25, 2013
Jun 25, 2013 at 2:50 PM UTC
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