And as the wind moved softly across
the earth she thought she saw a shadow. Her mind saw the shadow, but she… she
saw nothing. Not really. This was life; seeing things and clinging to them,
like pleasant dreams. And just like a dream you can wake up and realise that
what you thought you saw, thought you had hold of, was not really true. It was
never yours to see, or yours to hold.
Sometimes people wake and are
convinced that what they saw belonged to them, confident in the certain belief
that it was real. There is even, on occasion, when the mists of sleep have
faded from the eyes and mind of the dreamer, the feeling that what had been dreamt
really did happen, when it could not conceivably have done so, and these
feelings are impossible to dilute with a cup of morning coffee. And so it was
with her – the shadows moved, but when she turned to see them, they were gone.
***
Evie was tired. Her legs ached and
her back was sore. She had been walking for hours, going nowhere.
Early that morning, when the first
slivers of light were trying to slip unnoticed through the miniscule gap in her
bedroom curtains, Evie had turned to her husband and, shaking him tenderly
awake, had told him that she was going for a walk. His response was to stare at
her blankly and silently. He then painfully turned his head, his neck stiff
with old age, and tried to focus on the small alarm clock with its luminous
hands that sat on the bedside table next to his wife. “But it’s five o’clock!”
he managed, swallowing a yawn. “I know,” Evie had murmured, slipping out from
the sheets and padding across to the window. She held back one side of the
curtain and peered through. “Look at it out there,” she said, not turning,
keeping her eyes locked on the view, “Everything is awake, and we’re in bed. I
want to be part of the world outside.” Evie stopped what she was saying,
sensing the room was too quiet, and turned. Her husband was asleep.
As soon as she stepped outside of her
front door, she felt different. Less frail, less fragile, less old. The crisp
air that only existed in the first few hours of morning, before the day had had
a chance to pollute it, flowed into her lungs and she felt purified. She was
reminded of childhood holidays with her parents when the days stretched out forever
and the fear of old age didn’t yet exist. She momentarily felt the sharp tang
of grief for people and years long gone and then she had set off with a
strident, purposeful air, humming to herself some nondescript but tuneful song
of her own composing.
She found herself on top of a small
hillock in the middle of a park that she had played in when she was a little
girl, her feet joining forces with her nostalgia to take her there. From there
she looked at the sky, seeing how the newborn sun painted the clouds pink. It
didn’t last long. She had felt so alive that morning, just standing there,
watching, drinking in all the sights, sounds and smells around her, but now her
legs were slowing in their stride and she reluctantly felt it was time to
return home again. She looked at her watch and was shocked to discover that it
was ten o’clock. She had been awake for five hours, out walking for almost four
and a half. No wonder her legs were beginning to ache. But the idea of going
back home was no longer appealing; breakfast sounded a lot better.
Evie cut through the park and
strolled towards a little café she knew. It had been there since before World
War Two, and it had been a ritual to quickly pop in there on the way home from
school; the owners would always have a piece of bread and jam ready for Evie
when she stopped by. Since then, of course, many owners had come and gone, but
the friendly atmosphere still remained and the food was good enough even if she
did now have to pay for it. They would even do a slice of bread and jam if she
asked for it. This morning she asked for three.
There was a payphone at the back of
the café. It was hardly used now in the age of the mobile, but Evie wandered over
to it and quickly dialled her own number after fumbling in her purse for some
coins. “Hello? Jim? It’s me, it’s Evie.”
“Where are you?” asked Jim, concern
on the edge of his voice. “You’ve been gone hours.”
“Oh, I’m just walking around. I’m
having breakfast, actually. What are you doing?”
“Me? Not much, just getting things
ready for this evening. What time are you getting back?”
Evie ignored his last question and
asked one of her own; “This evening?”
Sighing, Jim explained. “It’s this
barbecue thing we’re doing, remember? The family’s all coming over.”
“Oh!” Evie exclaimed, “I forgot! I’ll
be home in a bit, I promise, then I’ll help you.”
Jim paused and then grumbled
something in answer (probably to do with her not worrying, but Evie didn’t
quite catch it) and the couple said their goodbyes. Evie wondered how she could have forgotten
something that had been arranged for at least a week; she supposed it was the
excitement of this spontaneous bit of exercise, something so out of the
ordinary that the usual run of things went by the wayside.
Not wanting to think too much about
forgetting and full of nostalgia after eating in one of her childhood haunts, Evie
decided to walk home past her old school. She would have dearly loved to go
inside, but couldn’t see how that was possible, she didn’t want to be thought of
as a weirdo sneaking around the little ones. Instead she paused by the gate,
wrapped in a cloud of memories; rather than the children of today, she could
see her own small companions running and skipping about the playground.
Immersed as she was in her own warm thoughts,
Evie did not respond immediately to the authoritative voice in front of her. It
took a firm hand on her shoulder and an even firmer voice, to snap her back to
the here and now. Evie turned to see a young woman, vaguely familiar, standing
by her side, wearing a beautiful blue summer dress. “Can I help you?” she
asked.
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