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Isolde looks from the window of her old bedroom, she's not been in there since they took her to the asylum years before. Tristana, her lover, is sitting on a white chair on the lawn talking to Isolde's mother. Her mother has the same pinched features, thin lips as if drawn across in ink, the narrow nose, peering eyes. Isolde smells the mustiness of the room, the curtains the same, the wallpaper fading. Her mother's eyes   have a look of fear in them. Her sister sits beside her mother hawk-like, hands on the arms of the chair, eyes fixed with that steady stare. Isolde recalls the last time in the room: the night they came for her, men in white coats, the ambulance waiting, flashing lights, voices shouting, her sister crying, her father ordering this and that (the prat). Father's dead now, good riddance, she muses, running a finger down the pane of glass, seeing her lover sitting there, gesturing with her hands, head tilted to one side. Not once did her mother visit her in the asylum, not a word sent or love or concern expressed. She sits on the bed, the springs complain, the bedspread pushes out dust. She remembers Tristana that first time in the asylum, that first meeting, the side ward, the nurse dragging her along the passage, cursing, gripping her nightgown.   The fat nurse let her drop by the bed; Tristana sat on the floor wide eyed, opened mouthed. Isolde had struck the nurse with the flower vase, smashed it, flowers spread across the floor. The nurse's head bled. Looked worse than it was. She smiles. They locked her up for weeks for that, saw none, except the nurses who fed and bathed her cruelly. Worth it. She moves on the bed, the springs sing. She gets up and goes to the window again. Tristana is subdued now; the mother is talking, moving her hands in the air as if learning to fly. Her sister sits crossed legged, hands on her knees. Dumb expression. The mother mouths words, moves her head to one side bird-like. Isolde recalls the first kiss on Tristana's lips. In the toilets off the ward, evening time, overhead lights flickering. Lips meeting, soft, wet, eyes closed. They slept in Tristana's bed in dead of night, close for warmth, hands holding, bodies touching. The mother looks up at the window, her eyes empty, hollow dark holes. She gestures to Isolde to come down, her thin hand moving icily. Isolde walks from the window. On the glass, where she had breathed breath to smear, she had finger written, Isolde's mind and soul once died here.
0
Oct 18, 2013
Oct 18, 2013 at 7:21 AM UTC
ONCE DIED HERE.
Isolde looks from the window of her old bedroom, she's not been in there since they took her to the asylum years before. Tristana, her lover, is sitting on a white chair on the lawn talking to Isolde's mother. Her mother has the same pinched features, thin lips as if drawn across in ink, the narrow nose, peering eyes. Isolde smells the mustiness of the room, the curtains the same, the wallpaper fading. Her mother's eyes   have a look of fear in them. Her sister sits beside her mother hawk-like, hands on the arms of the chair, eyes fixed with that steady stare. Isolde recalls the last time in the room: the night they came for her, men in white coats, the ambulance waiting, flashing lights, voices shouting, her sister crying, her father ordering this and that (the prat). Father's dead now, good riddance, she muses, running a finger down the pane of glass, seeing her lover sitting there, gesturing with her hands, head tilted to one side. Not once did her mother visit her in the asylum, not a word sent or love or concern expressed. She sits on the bed, the springs complain, the bedspread pushes out dust. She remembers Tristana that first time in the asylum, that first meeting, the side ward, the nurse dragging her along the passage, cursing, gripping her nightgown.   The fat nurse let her drop by the bed; Tristana sat on the floor wide eyed, opened mouthed. Isolde had struck the nurse with the flower vase, smashed it, flowers spread across the floor. The nurse's head bled. Looked worse than it was. She smiles. They locked her up for weeks for that, saw none, except the nurses who fed and bathed her cruelly. Worth it. She moves on the bed, the springs sing. She gets up and goes to the window again. Tristana is subdued now; the mother is talking, moving her hands in the air as if learning to fly. Her sister sits crossed legged, hands on her knees. Dumb expression. The mother mouths words, moves her head to one side bird-like. Isolde recalls the first kiss on Tristana's lips. In the toilets off the ward, evening time, overhead lights flickering. Lips meeting, soft, wet, eyes closed. They slept in Tristana's bed in dead of night, close for warmth, hands holding, bodies touching. The mother looks up at the window, her eyes empty, hollow dark holes. She gestures to Isolde to come down, her thin hand moving icily. Isolde walks from the window. On the glass, where she had breathed breath to smear, she had finger written, Isolde's mind and soul once died here.
terry-collett
Written by
Oct 18, 2013
Oct 18, 2013 at 7:21 AM UTC
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