My heart races, the familiar presence of the stranger
lingers over me. I rush to my window, seeing nothing but a moonlit ocean. I
should probably tell Nan by now, but the excitement the anticipation that
someone, something interesting might be happening in my life, makes me smile
and gets me thinking. I picture the man from my dreams, flames lick is body,
sweat evaporating as it leaves his skin and steams into the flames. I never see
his face always distracted by the contours of his body; suddenly Nan pulls me
away a knowing smile on her face. I’m confused but follow her anyway only to
reach a place that always seems to slip my memory. I sit at my desk in a tiff
trying to remember the dream that waits my every night I close my eyes.
“Hey Nan, do you know anyone who
works at a circus?” she smiles, and it mirrors identically to the one in my
dream, I try to look composed but am smiling inside "could he possibly be real?
“Oh course I do I told you the story
about him when you were little, remember?”
“Yes, actually I do...thank you Nan” I
say my mind elsewhere thinking back to when I was just little girl and I used
to imagine how he would look like; he was my imaginary friend for a while too.
He had short blonde hair that spiked out in all directions and he was a famous
fire breather with the Russian Circus. He had a white Friesian the only one of
its kind, it was so beautiful. Lacy was its name and it was so pretty that all
the kids in town couldn’t take their eyes off her whenever we rode through town
together; well that never actually happened since it was only in my head,
though it feels so real like a true childhood memory -but that’s not possible,
he wasn’t real. I sign, force myself off my seat and get changed into something
more sleepwear like. As I work into my room, the whole cabin fell quiet -too
quiet. I waited to hear Nan scrub a dish, or hum or something to let me know
she’s ok. The cabin became eerie and dark, like the life had been sucked from
the room. A purr hummed in my ear, it sounded like it came from some sort of
giant cat, and I was too scared to see for myself and just bolted to the
kitchen where Nan stood wiping down the bench top.