I dreamed that I died. It was a warm dream, full of sunshiny yellows and golds. There were flowers and fields. There was no pain; that's how I know it was a dream.
I woke up to cold pleather under my skin. Scratchy linen barely covering my body. Straps holding my limbs in place. Beeping. Hushed, fervent whispering.
I want to go back to sleep. I want to go back to the dream.But I can't. I knew that when I put my knife to my skin that I couldn't go back.
What was I thinking?
I was thinking that maybe I would die--maybe I wouldn't have to wake up to this world anymore. Maybe I really wanted to die. Maybe none of this was a plan for revenge but a way of saying my last rites before passing into the netherworld. But no, I woke up to the pain.
Did it work? Did I break them? Corey, Lily, Grant?
I try to lean up to look around me but I find I can't move due to my constraints. I turn my head, ignoring the migraine screaming through my skull.
All I can see is Mom. Mom and Emma are standing next to a doctor. Mom has a shawl wrapped around her shoulders, hugging her arms to her chest. She tries to appear calm and unaffected, but even from here, I can see the tremble of her chin. Emma is holding a stuffed animal and her eyes are red-rimmed and puffy. They've been crying.
This is my fault.
I close my eyes and welcome the nothingness that chases my consciousness.
YOU ARE READING
Forgetters, Leavers, and Complainers
Short StoryYou're diagnosed with a chronic illness. You tell your friends, and they do one of three things. Some of them forget after a little while; they don't ask about doctor's visits or medications. Some of them complain--when you're too tired to go out, t...