Lunette Vuesain
I'm drowning in the waters of myself
She wanted to be noticed.She wanted to be forgotten, so she could die without guilt.
She wanted to be left behind, so it wouldn't have been her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance of life, an understandable, acceptable action on behalf of those who had been subject to her presence for so long. They were not at fault, would never be at fault.
For once, she sat by the lake—tangible, real, more than just a scent left behind as she passed through the Cove and out into the world. The early morning sunlight formed a halo around her silver body, lighting up each white breath puffing from her open mouth. She was painfully aware of every second passing. Every heartbeat. Every breath. Every sound, no matter how slight, torture on her taut nerves.
Notice me her body screamed, even as she tried to smother it; even as she told herself that what she wanted was confirmation that she had been left behind. Forgotten. That she could move on, into oblivion, without leaving any open doors behind. She wanted to hear the final sigh of the last, open one slowly coming shut.
She wanted to break it down, crash through it, screaming, crying, feeling.
She wanted to feel her face collide with it, painfully, wanted it to not budge, to remain closed.
Her breath shivered in her throat. She felt too obvious. Not obvious enough. She felt foolish, dumb; it didn't matter how many times his kind words washed over her ears, she could never quite believe them. She wanted to be at the end of the line, to have used up the last of his patience and gentleness, so that the sun would set for a final time. She wanted to disappear in a way you couldn't come back from.
She wanted him to sit next to her, silent and steadfast; she wanted to bury her face in his black fur, for her apology of the distance she had put between them to be accepted, for her to be accepted. Forgiven.
She ought to go to him. Seek him out. Tell him what was on her mind, beg for his forgiveness, promise not to do it again (—and just wait until she'd break it), somehow convey to him how important he was. After months of silence, how could he know that she was coming out of her shell, if she didn't tell him?
But she remained frozen to the snowy rock she sat upon, in the morning light, wondering, if he came close enough, if he would hear how her soul screamed his name.