Among the scattered dinner plates she lay, all chipped and broken, as the sky seeped from mango, to indigo, to night. The moon had seen. The moon saw everything.
Under the flick, flick, flick of the fluorescent, his now calm hand, palm up, open, remained near her foot. She tried to kick it from her but her watery breaths went shallow as the burning ripped deep inside her chest. ‘So this is how it ends’ she whispered as everything went black and still.
But some things are never over. Black is never the absence of light, black is the sum.
After the burning, came the noise. The noise of movement. A thunderous flapping. Completely surrounding her, almost in her. Flipping her upwards, outwards, as she felt her body compress, click, convert.
Bursting forth from the tower, which for six centuries had cast its shadow on the river, the ravens swirled into the emerging day. Flick, flick, flick, her eyes rotated and she could see the river, the town, her life, all in panorama.
What had she become? What had she really been?
The ‘toc, toc, toc’ of the birds drowned out her calls for him. She followed the river down to the house, they had shared. She perched on the tree they had planted years ago, when things were different. Did hate last longer than love? Was this mercy or retribution?
Unknown instinct began to call for the return to Ormond tower. Among the scattered branches she sat, all broken and chipped, as the sky seeped from night, to indigo, to mango.
Author’s note: A group of ravens can be known as an unkindness.
10 thoughts on
“Unkindness”
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Love this story Mary, so atmospheric.
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Thanks so much Margaret.
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Beautiful thought provoking piece Mary, well done!
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Thank you Ann.
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Great piece of writing, Mary. Congratulations!
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Thanks Wattie, you’re very kind.
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So atmospheric.
The story pulled me in deep and stayed with me .
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Thanks so much Eileen
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I loved the story Mary, full of mystery and colour and magic and tragedy. Thank you.
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Thanks Fionnuala, much appreciated.