Half our class attended the reunion
just to see how she turned out. She wasn't there, of course. Gossip
that night swirled above cheap polyester tablecloths and between
tacky carnation centerpieces and somehow she was in every
conversation, each with a different theory of where she was and what
she was doing, and all remembering her amazing eyes.
We had been friends of a sort. I was
bookish and kept my head down. Still, I somehow made peace with every
clique while belonging to none. She, too, was an outsider, although
by choice rather than happenstance. Some days she would sit with me
in whatever corner I'd found, alighting like a hawk on a wire,
watching with unblinking eyes the hubbub all around us. She didn't
feel obliged to chat; however, she would occasionally share a wry
observation that finally made sense hours later. It was as if she saw
more than the rest of us. I never mentioned how much I admired her.
We continued our acquaintance through
college and beyond. I was honored whenever she called, dropping
everything to meet her for coffee or to catch an esoteric indie film
which she understood and I mentioned at cocktail parties in order to seem more
interesting. I never initiated contact; it seemed
implausible that she'd want to be my friend. Still, we got together
nearly every month, commiserating on school and professors and
sharing war stories about our dating lives. She followed an esoteric
course of study, exploring feminism and sociology before finally
finding her path in psychology. Her keen skills of observation, first
honed in high school, brought swift clarity to patients whose relief
outweighed any nervousness at her piercing gaze or somber outfits. My
interests were more pedestrian until I tangled botany, anthropology,
and biology and found myself heading to the rain forest to try to find
a cure for cancer. When I got back I suddenly was the interesting
one, with stories of having lived -- and shared rites with -- cannibalistic natives in order to collect unfamiliar
plant species. At dinner she turned her blue, blue eyes on me and I basked
in the attention, reveling in the role reversal, as if I finally had
achieved my dream not just of being with her, but being her. That
night she told me she'd always admired my style. When we kissed my
high-school self leaped for joy.
Our romance was fast and hot and died
just as quickly when she came to see how empty I was. She'd
mistaken my fascination with her for an actual personality. The disappointment was palpable as she packed to leave my apartment the
final time, while I sat, shocked, terrified of losing her. I couldn't
imagine what shape I would take without her as my mirror, my muse, my model. I had spent so much time wanting to be her I'd never learned
to be myself.
She graced me with one final kiss, the
same gothic girl I hungered to be, black dresses and wry laughter and piercing blue eyes. I tasted her laughter. I tasted our past. I tasted what I could become.
I ate her eyes last.
This post was prompted by Bliss Morgan's "Nightmare Fuel" challenge.
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