October 8, 2008

  • [Short Story] A Moment of Perfect Happiness [repost]

    I’m low on inspiration so this is a repost from a long time ago. I had forgotten I’d written this story. I wrote it based on one of my few dreams. Enjoy!

    ***********

    They were my friends, the two of them who asked me to journey with
    them. And they needed my help, so I agreed. They spoke of the joy of
    adventure, the pleasure of discovery, and the possibility of treasure
    at the end with such enthusiasm that I felt my enthusiasm growing too.
    But I was cautious. Such journeys are not without their risks.

    We
    entered the ruins together and slowly we traversed them. There were
    dangers a plenty, traps and pitfalls and strange powers barring our
    way.  My power was enough to disarm many, my presence could diffuse the
    risk of others. But for the rest, we helped each other, worked together
    to keep each other safe. It was harder than we expected even with my
    ability and several times we feared for our lives, but somehow we
    managed to make our way through the maze like caverns and find our way
    to their end.

    A grand hall awaits us by there is no treasure to
    be seen. Only ahead at the back wall of the strange chamber there is a
    gaping square hole like a shoot just barely wide enough for a grown man
    to slide through, above it are strange runes and symbols of a bygone
    era.

    My friends approach it eagerly I hold back but they can
    find nothing interesting about the wall. They wonder if they should try
    entering the shoot and seeing what is beyond.

    “Wait.”  I say.

    As
    I said, I was cautious. So I slowly walked up to the front of the room
    and my friends make way for me.  As I come up to the shoot the words
    above it start to glow reacting to my presence. I am not surprised,
    these sorts of things tends to happen when you command the power.

    A
    moment passes and then we hear a mysterious disembodied voice and I
    know that it is stating the words inscribed in the runes. It states:

    “For each, ask and receive a treasure of great desire or for one enter and experience a moment of perfect happiness.”

    Trepidation
    strikes me. Something isn’t right. I look to my left and to my right at
    my companions and then I see it in their eyes.  There is guilt
    overwhelmed by desire. They want it. Badly.  They had known of this.
    This was why they really came, why they brought me to this place and
    asked for my help. They needed me but they knew that only one of us
    could claim the prize.

    What would have happened next? Would
    they have begged me? Forced me to choose between one friend and
    another. Both had used me. Both had betrayed me in this. But even had
    they not I could never pick one over the other. 

    Or would we fight for it? Would our friendship shatter here? I could not bare it.

    I
    could ask, but for what? And would we not wonder always what we had
    missed? I knew it was the safer course to take the consolation prize
    and be happy and together, but I wondered if the insidiousness of
    uncertainty would undermine our alliance. Who was I to choose for them?
    And I could see in their eyes that neither would ever agree to anything
    less than perfection.

    I had one advantage left and only one
    choice that I could be made.  I was closest. So I jumped in before they
    could react and stop me. If only one could take the risk let it be me.
    Or was it just that I was just as selfish and filled with greed and I
    wanted it as much or more than them?

    I find myself lying on my
    back in an idyllic landscape.  Above me, I watch beautiful clouds float
    by, the sky is a perfect blue. I feel the warmth of the sun heating my
    face while the cool ground cools my back and a gentle wind floats over
    me.  I am younger here. Just a kid again. All the burdens that had
    plagued me daily of doubt and fear and an underlying anger were all
    gone as were the memories of hurt and fear and pain. I never knew how
    heavy a burden they had been for me until they were lifted.

    Beside
    me lying on his back as well is a person that I know instantly to be my
    closest friend. There are no names in this place, none that can be
    vocalized but I know his and he knows mine. We lie looking up in
    companionable silence, lost in our own thoughts but they don’t feel to
    be separate thoughts. I feel as if we are two sides of the same coin
    and  that all that we do is linked.

    After a moment there is a
    rustle in the trees and we hear soft laughter coming from beyond. We
    both sit up at the same time and stare off to see our friends emerge
    from the tree. There are four of them, two girls and two guys and they
    look at us with their happy smiling familiar faces. I know them all,
    trust them all, and I know that they are amongst the only people in the
    world that I would want to spend time with.

    “What’s so funny?”  my friend asks, with pretend hurt.

    They don’t respond directly,  but one of the guys says “You two weren’t going to keep this place all to yourselves were you?”

    We
    laugh and talk companionably and soon we have an impromptu picnic in
    the glade. We eat and talk and play and chatter about pointless things.
    But never a word causes me discomfort and I never feel at a loss of
    what to say or never feel a sense of fear of what they might think.  It
    was perfect. Almost.

    As its get’s later, I ask the question.  I
    know her name and we all do, the seventh and last member of our group
    who is absent from our revelry. Someone snickers. A girl tells me that
    she went to sit by the lake. I twirl a blade of grass in my hand and
    stare at it as everyone grows quiet around me.  My closest friend looks
    at me with concern. My other friends look at me with curiosity.

    I
    give some pointless excuse that all can see through and stand up and
    walk off away from our pleasant companionship to find her. Through the
    trees I travel and to the lake where I see her sitting on a peer that
    stretches out into the water. The sunset shines behind her.

    I
    walk over and sit beside her, our legs are dangling out over the water.
    She turns at my presence and smiles at me. I smile back and ask her the
    obvious question.

    “What are you doing out here by yourself.”

    She turns away from me still smiling and answers me with a question.

    “Have you ever seen a more beautiful sight?”

    I
    cannot deny it. Eventually I turn my eyes from her and stare out to see
    what she sees. The beauty of a perfect sunset over the twinkling water,
    a sight alone that seems to make life worth living. We sit in silence
    staring at the light, she rests her hand lightly upon mine.

    This
    was it, a group of perfect friends, a perfect moment of companionship.
    No fears, no doubts, only the comfort of knowing your place in the
    world and experiencing the joy of the perfect beauty that surrounds us.
    I thought that I was happy truly. Perfectly happy.

    As I have
    this thought, she turns to me suddenly. The light from the sun is more
    than three quarters gone. Soon it will have faded.  In her eyes is a
    seriousness and a certainty that I had never seen before. She looks me
    right in the eyes and says the words that haunt me still. There is a
    deep sadness tinging her voice as she says them

    “Not even perfect happiness lasts forever.”

    With
    that her face contorts into a kind of anger and rage I’ve never
    imagined. She grips me harshly and throws me into the lake leaping in
    after me. There she hold my head under the water while her eyes glare
    at me with unfathomable depths of raging hatred. I’ve never seen such
    fiery despite in the eyes of another. I’ve never felt anyone look upon
    me as if I was the lowest of the low, worthy of nothing more than total
    elimination.

    I look up through the clear water through which my
    head is submerged. I look beyond her to the side of the lake and I see
    them. My four friends standing there and pointing at us in the water.
    But none make a move to save me. No. Instead, though my ears are filled
    with water I  can hear their laughter floating up toward me. They are
    shaking with laughter pointing and mocking me. To them my drowning is a
    joke. I am not worthy to be saved, but I am worthy of giving them a
    moment’s amusement as I suffer.

    I shudder but one thing keeps
    me sane, and keeps me struggling to force my way up for air and breathe
    and life. My closest friend is not amongst them. He is not there
    laughing at me. He wouldn’t I think. 

    But where is he? I look
    around desperately while I struggle, always trying to keep my eyes away
    from seeing the fiery hatred in her eyes or the sparkling laughter of
    those on the shore.  Eventually I look up to the pier from which we had
    jumped and I see first his shoes at the edge of the pier and I feel a
    sense of deep relief. He has come all the way out here to save me!
    Surely he won’t abandon me.  I reach out my hand towards him thinking
    and hoping that he is reaching down to grasp mine. My eyes travel up
    and up his body as I stretch further and more desperately. Until I
    finally see him.

    He is not reaching toward me. His eyes are
    clasped firmly in front of him. And his eyes, his terrible eyes. The
    sight cursed me to a lifetime of nightmares of those eyes. In them
    there was not laughter nor fierceness only a coldness deeper than the
    frigid waters beneath a thousand miles of ice. Everything about them
    screamed out a kind of cold disregard and disgust that I knew was
    devoted solely ant totally toward me. His eyes spoke condemnation at
    me. They screamed at me. Though he never said a word I knew exactly
    what he was saying with those eyes and the message rent my soul.  “How
    could you,” they said,  ” How can you be so weak?”

    I gasped in
    the anger and sorrow and fear and embarrassment I felt. And with it, I
    finally let the water into my lungs and with a moment of perfect
    despair I collapsed into emptiness.

    I awoke screaming at the top
    of my lungs with tears flying down my face. I struggled fiercely at
    hands that gripped me my mind fully lost to me for that moment still
    thinking I was drowning in the water.

    It took a long moment
    before I gained control of myself and I heard my name being spoken over
    and over again  by them who were with me still my two friends who had
    journeyed here with me who had fought with me to reach this place, to
    get this so called “treasure”. 

    I see in their eyes their deep
    concern for me. I wonder how long they had been there with me holding
    me, striving to bring me back to sanity. I gasp and choke an tears and
    I grip their hands tightly as the images of my experiences float back
    through my mind replaying through the clouds. I see the clouds, the
    sunset. I see their facing happy and smiling then filled with hatred,
    and scorn and overwhelming disappointment. 

    It seemed like I
    sat there on the stones for an eternity but eventually I got up and
    they my friends ever present stood with me. I wiped my eyes and found
    my center. I shook off their grasp and walked slowly on my own around
    the small room that must have been at the bottom of the shoot where we
    all now stood. I walked slowly two circuits around the room taking deep
    breathes the entire time until I knew for certain that I was in
    complete control of my faculties.

    Finally I came back to my friends and I looked at them and it was as if I saw seeing them for the first time.

    “Are you ok?”   One of them asked with trepidation.

    I
    didn’t answer. But I looked at them closely. They were truly concerned
    for my well being. I knew that this that had happened to me weighed
    heavily on them. They felt the guilt for it even not knowing what it
    was that had happened.  But just below the surface I could see it in
    them too the burning question that next to knowing that I was ok was
    the one thing they most desired to know, needed to know, would not be
    satisfied without knowing. It was why they came. It was why we are all
    here now.

    They must have seen it in my eyes. The certainty of
    the demand that they ask and ask now. I would not volunteer it unless
    they asked.

    “What was it like…” one of them started his eyes turned away unable to face me.

    “…
    that… moment of perfect happiness?” the other finished, her face
    filled with shame and uncertainty as she tried to look anywhere but
    into my eyes.

    And I thought about it then and I knew the answer.
    There in that place I had experienced ‘perfect’ friends and ‘perfect’
    experiences but they had been unreal, illusions. Those friends would
    commit no wrongs feel no doubts, fear no evils. But these friends
    before me know. They felt shame and uncertainty. They had their own
    wants and needs independent of me that could drive them to great evil
    or great good. And yet they had a concern for me, had come after me
    when they heard me screaming alone in the darkness, had tried to save
    me. Those people in the other world, they had been been the perfect
    friends. But these friends here in this world. They were real.

    I gripped both of their hands in mine fiercely.

    “Perfect happiness…” I started.

    I
    waited until they both looked up and met my gaze squarely. Then I spoke
    with more seriousness and conviction than I had ever spoken before.

    “There is no such thing!”

    And
    then I smiled at them, softening my grip but still holding their hands
    and they smiled back cautiously at me. These were my friends. My real
    friends. Hopeless real and hopelessly flawed just as I was. I needed
    them as they are and what they are. I didn’t want perfect happiness.
    Just a chance to find even a little was good enough for me.

    “Let’s go home.”

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