something I wrote last summer, inspired by the quote
"I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night"
(sarah williams)
"I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night"
(sarah williams)
It’s late, maybe after midnight, but I can’t sleep. I’ve
been lying awake for what feels like hours, tossing and turning until my hair
is plastered to my forehead and my blanket sticks to my skin. Darn spring
humidity. If the whole summer’s going to be like this, we might as well buy a
house at the beach; it’s where we’ll probably end up spending most of our time.
My whole body feels alive, my skin tingling. Why is it that
at night, when you can’t sleep, everything feels so much sharper? Not painfully
so…more like you were looking at a picture you didn’t realize was blurry until
the photographer pulled it into focus. Maybe it’s the shadows, the
uncompromising black and white lines exuding clarity where colour cannot.
Maybe I’m just overtired.
I swing my legs over the edge of the mattress and set my
feet on the cool wooden floorboards. When I was little, we had a bigger house
in the country. I was too young at the time to know why we had to move, but now
I’m pretty sure it had something to do with money. Why else would my parents
pack their family up and move to the gray concrete of the city?
I get to my feet and pull the blanket off my bed. It’s
funny…out of all the things I miss about our country home – the space, the
colour, the feeling like you could breathe without inhaling toxic fumes – I
miss the stars the most. I’ve always been fascinated by them. The little
pinpricks of light, way up in the sky. Windows to heaven, Mom always called
them. She said if I looked hard enough, I’d be able to see God peering down at
me. I asked her once what he did during the daytime, since there weren’t any
stars to see through, and she laughed. “The stars don’t go away during the
daytime, Birdie,” she said. “You can’t see them, but they’re always there.
Always watching you. Just like God.”
My door creaks as I ease it open, and I hold my breath,
glancing towards my parents’ bedroom at the end of the hall. Finally, when I’m
satisfied that they’re still asleep, I slip out and down the stairs, skipping
the squeaky third one. The air in the living room is cooler, one window propped
open to let the breeze blow through the house, and I shiver, wrapping the
blanket around my shoulders.
“Going out to look at the stars?”
I whip around, my heart thumping in my ears. “Geez, Mike!
You scared me half to death!”
My brother’s hair is sticking up on the left side of his
head – a fact he is obviously not aware of, or he’d be smoothing it down
instead of smirking patronizingly at me. “Sorry. Couldn’t sleep.”
I shiver again, although I’m not cold. “Me neither.” I tuck
the blanket more firmly around myself, and shift my weight from one foot to the
other. “Will you come outside with me?”
Mike scoots his chair back and gets to his feet. “All
right.” He reaches out – our house is small enough that my brother, with his
long arms, can open the door from the kitchen table – and unlocks the front
door, holding it open for me to step outside.
We used to sneak out all the time when we were kids, at home
on the farm. Mom and Dad didn’t care, as long as neither of us went out alone
and we didn’t leave the front porch. Since moving to the city, it was kind of
an unspoken agreement that our midnight escapades would have to stop, although
there’ve been several times where we met in the night and tiptoed out to the
tree.
“Here,” I say, sliding my feet through the dewy grass. “Hold
my blanket so I can climb up.” The one good thing about our tiny house and
miniscule backyard is the tree. It’s the biggest one I’ve ever seen, even
bigger than the ones we had on the farm, with low branches that are perfect for
climbing. There are even a couple of higher branches that hang over the roof,
which is where Mike and I usually go to stargaze.
I dig my toes into the bark and clamber from branch to
branch, surprised by how quickly the familiar handholds come back to me.
“Ready?” hisses Mike, tossing my blanket up. I catch it with
my free hand and step gingerly onto the roof.
“Come on up.”
By the time he drops lightly to the shingles beside me, I’m
already on my back. The streetlights obscure some of my view, but the stars are
bright tonight and I can see well enough. Mike is silent for a few moments.
“One of my teachers said something interesting today.”
I keep my gaze fixed on the sky. “Yeah?”
“It made me think of you.”
“In what way?”
He clears his throat and rests his chin in his hand, silent
for so long that I wonder if he’s fallen asleep. “I have loved the stars too
fondly,” he says at last, “to be fearful of the night.”
“Wow.” I turn the words over in my mind. “That’s beautiful.”
He doesn’t respond, staring at the far-off horizon.
Something’s on his mind.
“What’s bothering you?”
“Huh?”
I sit up and look at him. “Something’s bugging you.”
He sighs. “I’ve been thinking about stars a lot. ‘S probably
why the quote got stuck in my head.”
“And is that a bad thing?”
Mike shakes his head, licks his lips. Searching for the
right words. “Remember how Mom used to say that stars were like windows to
heaven?”
Taken aback at this sudden change of topic, I nod.
“Do you believe that?”
I tilt my head. “Literally? No. Stars are just-“
He shakes his head again. “Nah, I said that wrong. Not the
part about the stars…you know. God. Do you really think there’s anyone up
there, or is he just a fantasy, like Santa, designed to make us feel good?”
I stare at him, my heartbeat picking up again. “Of course I
do! Don’t you?”
He shrugs. “I guess.” There’s a long pause. “It just doesn’t
make sense, Skylar.”
I feel ill. Older brothers are supposed to have all the
answers – they’re not allowed to ask questions. “Mike, I don’t know. Did you
ask Dad?”
He makes eye contact with me for the first time since we got
up here. “I dunno. I’m not sure how to approach it. And with him and Mom so
busy with preparations for their trip, I don’t think he’s got time.”
Excuses, of course. Mom and Dad are busy, but not THAT busy.
He just doesn’t want to approach the subject, for some reason.
“That’s why I couldn’t sleep,” he says, looking away again.
“I can’t stop thinking about it. It just…it just doesn’t make sense.”
I don’t bother asking which part of it doesn’t make sense. I
don’t want to know. Suddenly, all I want to do is to go to bed and pretend none
of this ever happened. “I’m going in,” I say, and instantly regret it as Mike’s
shoulders slump.
“’night.”
I toss the blanket down to the grass and swing myself off
the roof. “Yeah. Don’t stay out too long.”
He doesn’t reply.
I loved reading this. Since I read this post (on Monday night, I think?) that quote by Sarah Williams has been in spinning in my head :)
ReplyDeleteThis is just so lovely, and painted such a beautiful picture in my head.
Oh my goodness. This is so gorgeous! Now I want to read your NaNo book!!!
ReplyDeletewhooooooooooaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.
ReplyDeletedeep stuff here. this is so real, from the heart of the story down to the subtle body language.
this made me think a lot. thanks olivia:) you're a genius.
Goodness! This is so intriguing! Great stuff.
ReplyDelete