Each time I rose, more images assaulted my consciousness like bullets. Faces, my mother, father. A sister... her face was an unclear blur. Names, Jack, Kelsey, Rachel... my friends. A lifetime of recollections rejoined me after each loveless dream as I slowly regained myself.
However...
There were shards missing in the mirror I gazed into, a pond of silver reflecting my past and present. As I took in the image, I reached out to trace the cracks in my mind. Some faces were yet distorted, and the whole picture suffered in want of them. I felt broken, unintelligible, much like my reflection.
Arianna, my chestnut-haired roommate who wore a telling resemblance to my memory-self, was often there when I woke. She would kiss my forehead motherly and gift me with the time and date. Imposters clad in magenta went to and fro, bringing me drinks and food, but the cloudy-voiced woman did not reappear. I had wished she could stay with me, and I mourned her absence.
The only body I saw again was the man with the papers. He drifted in with the occasional blinking of the overhead light, questioning me daily with a barrage of inquiries into my shattered past. I knew once more where I lived, how many years I had spent alive, and that my grades in school were less than stellar.
After the third day of imprisonment (or was it the sixth? Should I count the hours awash in black?), Arianna and I began to have lengthy conversations, during which she revealed a gaunt livelihood behind her steep melancholy. She swore that she was my sister; her eyes brought me a deep nostalgia, but they did not feel like family. I brushed this aside, hardly trusting my own puzzle-piece memory. As we chatted, my words flew out with more and more ease, and she wove me stories of myself.
I was an artist. I could tell this, and Arianna confirmed it. My brain captured the colours and movement of every object, live or unmoving, that passed through my vision. When my head burned with a deep fire or my breathing tormented my chest, I closed my eyes and painted starlit skies on the back of my eyelids. In the stars, I found comfort whereas in the prison, only memories and anguish awaited.
One such morning of anguish was spent with the clipboard doctor, whom I came to know as Doctor Paxter. He trickled in on my sixth day of coherence to let me know that I was being discharged from the hospital. My cognition, he explained, his mouth sweet with condescension, was back to normal, and my injuries were not life-threatening.
My injuries... I had ponderously understood over the past days from hurtful experience and conversation that I had broken ribs and a broken right arm. I had been ever fearful to mention my inability to move the limb, convincing my stubborn self that it was because of the cast. The cast itself was a block of white, secreting away from the world a hideous piece of meat that was once human. I was fed the information that my humerus had fractured, a piece splintering, which then tore at my flesh like a little bony knife. Repairing the damage had not been easy, and I was projected to need many months of healing. My ribs would recover on their own in time, providing I didn't overdo it. Pfft! The most physically intense activity I do is walk to school.
I snorted a bit at the absurdity of this, but my derision failed to mask my worry. How will I get to school? Who will take me? Arianna? I did not feel exactly uncomfortable in her presence... it was closer to heartbreak. I wished to know this 'sister', but my attempts to remember her brought me only shards of the mirror that were painted black as onyx. I fit them into place, but they contributed nothing to the surface. Glaring back at me was a half-self, twisted and miserable. What was lost refused to return.
When today's magenta doppelganger glided in the room, she bore a stack of dog-eared papers. She passed them immediately to Arianna, but something in my conscious needed to see them. To read them. I suddenly put my left hand out for the packet, startling the nurse. Arianna held them for me to view without prelude, and I turned my attention to the joyful pink sheet lounging on the top of the formidable stack.
YOU ARE READING
Artistic License
Teen FictionMeet Annette, an artistic prodigy. The quickest connection to her soul involves a piece of paper, colored pencils, and an abundance of creative space. When she's involved in a devastating accident, she's lucky to walk away alive. However, once she d...