Dark HellA Story by ReneeJGirl has a phobia of the oceanHe went down, his skin like slime and his eyes
searched through the large body of green. I felt his teeth scrape against my delicate,
terrified skin. My eyes closed and my mouth opened to let a scream, but then I
felt the cool swish of water and everything became quiet and everything was
red, maybe it was my blood or the insides of my eyes. I was floating then I felt
a firm, warm grip and when I opened my eyes, the credits were slowly
ascending with the haunting voice of an unfamiliar singer in the background. It was after that day that I didn't walk too far
into the ocean or a pool because everytime time I close my eyes I see the grey
smooth skin slowly coming towards me, opening its wide jaws taking me in one
bite, or the rough back of an alligator pulling me into the depths of the
ocean, and the salt water suffocating me and burning my eyes. I could see my
arms failing to push me up, while the unbrushed teeth pull my body under for
its meal. I could feel my mouth opening and inside my head I can
hear the sound, the desire for freedom, but then he would silence me as I departed the world in an unconventional manner. Friends would beckon for me to
remove the thin cardigan and feel the warm liquid caress between my toes or the
warm sand ease the stress of the city away. They would lie back and stare at
the sun, smiling and then they would fake their own death, by going down and
staying there for awhile. At this point my breathing would become rapid and my
palms sweaty, because I could just see the creatures of the dark capturing them,
ripping them apart and taking them to the underwater graveyard. I remember once when I couldn't sleep. I refused to
swallow the blue and white pills the tired eyed doctor gave to me. I awoke to
the sound of water swishing and blasting from my computer. I covered my ears and
screamed. When I stepped off the bed I swore I felt water encircle my ankles
and the ticklish feel of fish surrounding me in the dark Hell. The sheets
twisted around my feet and I fell. I felt the water in my hair, my ear and
eyes. The light switched flicked and light rushed to every corner of the water
of the room, saving me. “What’s wrong” My mother yelled. I couldn't explain,
because I didn't even know the answer to my own fears. She pressed the power button on my computer and the
room became normal once more. I couldn't sleep that night. I kept seeing the
glow of water, beautiful but haunting beckoning me to join the world of sea
creatures. I can’t understand how girls love mermaids, because they scare the
daylight out of me. I couldn't imagine living in the dark with sea weeds
brushing against my legs and oversized whales swimming above or riding on the
back of dolphins while they spray water in my eyes, taking my ability to draw
daffodils and lie on gold grass while staring at the flaming yellow ball
hanging on the blue blanket and white pillows. The next day, after the episode in my room; I had a
fever. Perspiration bathed every crease and fold. My hair curled and the
moisture soaked through every strand. My mother slowly placed me in the bath
and I felt my heat go faster until I began to breathe ahead of my own control.
She dropped the rubber duck and toy shark in the clear water, without realizing
my fear. She ran the soft sponge over my back and in my hair. The coolness
soothed the burn of the fever, but the water kept running into my eyes and the
shark got bigger and swam slowly towards me, opening its mouth to take me. I
fell back into the clear hell into unconsciousness. I woke up in a white room. A stethoscope lay cold on
a table. The hospital gown ruffled nosily as I struggled to sit up. I could
hear the worried and hopeless voice behind the glass door. The white coat entered
before the smiling doctor. My mother came in behind biting her nails. Her hair
was untidy and her eyes red. He touched my face; his fingers were cold, a
little wet. I shook my head and looked at the brown file folder on his desk. “She needs fresh air” he told my mother, I
shuddered. Fresh air means a vacation with the promise of the hell rushing in
too close to the building. It meant a day of rain, making the hell rise and the
sea creatures escaping and not dying, because the rain would turn to a flood.
They would slowly glide into the windows and knocked down doors and take us under
to the dark Hell. The sweat came again, slowly making my legs and face
wet. My eyes rolled back and I felt the sturdy arm lift me and run. I could
hear the commands and the constant shuffling of feet. A rush of wind swept
through my hair and permeated through the whole building. My mother wrapped the blanket around me and pressed
my head into her lap. I can hear the crashing waves and see the sunset on the
far side where the creatures dwell, waiting for me. But now I am safe on the
rock. The little blue pills shake around in my pocket. She takes me slowly to
the shores. I cry when my feet touch the water, but she helps me. I have to
squeeze the grey toy shark they gave me, slowly I am healing. Friends bypass me
when beach invitations are sent out, but I am coping. Summers are spent at
rehab. I am rare like the others who sit in cardigans, afraid of the dark
hell.
© 2014 ReneeJ |
AuthorReneeJKingston, JamaicaAboutI love to write short stories and i do a lil bit of poetry more..Writing
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