Cut Loose
It was impossible for my father to move off
the bed unaided: overnight he had turned into a kite. He lay motionless covered
in garish red and yellow panels, such a contrast to
the sober greys of his customary three-piece business suits.
"First Mum, now this," I said.
"What were you thinking of?"
"Check me
out," he said. "High-performance rip stop
nylon sail, graphite spars and an eight-foot wingspan
fully extended." He sounded 20 years younger.
"So, what was wrong with your old
life?" I asked.
"Reaching for a hand that's no longer
there?" he said. "Sitting hollow-eyed in front of the TV night after
night? Lying awake alone?"
"You didn't consider my
feelings?" I said. "You're the only family I have left."
"I'm counting on you," he said.
It was a fresh October
morning. We had chosen a nearby beach. "Keep your
back to the wind," he said, "and hold me up till the current catches
my sail."
I hurled him upwards. He hovered
momentarily before falling to the ground.
It's no use, I wanted to say. Not enough
wind. Let's go home, try again another day. But I felt his gaze, like something
heavy pressing down on me.
Placing him on the ground this time, I
moved back, feeding out his line from its winder. Fifteen feet away, I waited,
the wind gusted and I tugged hard.
He soared skywards, his long tail
streaming.
Searching for Venus
After his wife left him, my neighbour built a treehouse in his garden. Mr Ortega spotted me admiring his handiwork over the fence one night when I couldn't sleep. Five meters off the ground, the place had a shingle roof and paneled timber walls. Yellow light burned from a window.
"Must be a great view of the neighbourhood from up there," I said.
He invited me over.
Inside, the treehouse smelled of pine sap. Mr Ortega had furnished it with an old barstool, a hat stand and a camp bed.
"My new sleeping quarters," he said.
I understood, I told him.
Around his neck he wore a pair of binoculars. "Here," he said and he handed them to me. "The cloud has cleared. You can see Venus tonight."
I trained the binoculars at the night sky, but didn't spend long searching for Venus. My gaze drifted lower, to the master bedroom in my house, to the black lacquer jewelry box on the dressing table, by the brush that still held strands of wavy blonde hair, to A Room of One's Own on the bedside table, next to the old listings magazine with a red ribbon marking the page of a film to see.
Behind me a floorboard creaked. "Can you see it yet?" Mr Ortega asked.
CP
Digby Beaumont writes short stories and flash fiction. His work appears widely in magazines and anthologies, both online and in print, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net Anthology. He has made a living as a nonfiction author for many years, with numerous publications, and lives in Hove, England.
1 comment:
...wonderful :-)
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