Dear Reader, Dear R,
Here is a bit of flash fiction I wrote. Don't judge me too harshly on it.
Oh, and try listening to this song while you read:
Honey
It
began with the bird. As much as he’d wanted to believe that it
started so many years later. In the deepest fissures of his mind he
knew: It began with the bird. A pigeon, common, and dirty. Nothing
special. He thought of it as he looked at the woman, laying sprawled
on his mattress. He reached out, and placed one cool hand on her
thigh. He remembered the way the bird had struggled, shivered beneath
his perfect hands. He wondered if the woman would shiver.
His
mother had said he had the hands of a pianist, an artist. Long,
slender, and the perfect outline of blue veins just beneath his pale
skin. She, his mother, would take one of his hands in hers, and kiss
it. “Beautiful.” She’d whisper, with a voice dripping like
honey.
Three
days before the bird, he’d found his mother with slit wrists in the
bathtub, and a note saying that she was sorry. His aunt had come to
stay with him. His mother’s awful older sister, reeking of
cigarettes and perfume. She was the one who had found the bird. It
had flown down the chimney, and was trapped behind the doors of the
cold, wood stove. She instructed him to catch it, take it outside, and set
it free. He’d stood in the hallway, stroking one long finger over
the brown corduroy of his pant leg, as she had repeated her request,
demanded that he take the bird away. The women he picked were never
demanding. They were plain, like the pigeon had been.
He’d
knelt in the gravel and dust, near the train tracks behind the house.
Just beyond a row of trees that blocked the view from the kitchen
window. He’d delicately twisted the bird’s neck from side to
side, and then just far enough in the wrong direction, until, with
one delicate snap
it’s distressed chirping had stopped, and it had gone still. He
tore it’s wings off, ripped at them with raw fingernails, until the
bird oozed red. It had laid limply then, on the gravel like a
crippled toy, and as he’d stared, he had felt the honey word form
in his mouth, had tasted it on his tongue.
The
woman’s wrists were bound, but she was struggling now, like the
bird had. His fingers itched for her throat. Her eyes bulged behind
the thin blindfold. His knuckles were white. He tasted honey.
“Beautiful.” He whispered.
Excellent talent! Totally sick and disturbing... but well written.
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