Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stories. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2024

Love in a Maze


 


                                          By Gene Case


 

I’ll tell it like it never happened. I think maybe it didn’t, or hasn’t yet; I think that in telling events as I remember them, sequencing them into narrative, I am perhaps creating it. I’ll tell it as if I imagined it.

         

(He wrote to me: unclear antecedent. It has never before occurred to me that people don’t know what I mean when I say it or this. —I love the word this, the sweeping gesture of the fricatives, tongue tip tugged backward under the teeth.— I don’t mean them as pronouns; I don’t know how to explain what they mean.)

         

We’re in his office, a spare, gabled attic room. Windows run the length of the east wall, overlooking the quad. It’s warm. We have talked about poetry, and now we turn to prose, which both of us prefer.

         

I say we. There is a girl in my chair. She swivels back and forth absently, knees crossed, elbows balanced on the armrests. She is holding an eighth-folded sheet of ruled paper, uncrumpled from the pocket of her jeans. I wish she were a heroine. She would have the magnetic, artless sensitivity of an ingénue, if only she were better at being a girl.

         

We are speaking of prose. She says that a novella, Fantomina, has shocked her to her core; she says it’s one of the best things she’s ever read. She was stunned by it.

         

But she is confused. (How does a girl get a boy’s attention, other than asking him to explain something to her? I wouldn’t know.) The last act is obscure to her.

         

In the story, the unnamed heroine seduces the same man four times, in a different disguise each time. Each time he grows bored of her. The fourth time, she takes the name Incognita. Her disguise is self-consciously a disguise: she only meets him in a mask, and they make love in total darkness. Previously, her lover has supposed he knew her; this time, he knows he doesn’t.

         

The story imagines what it would be like to recreate desire infinitely—to get what you want and then want it again. Every time she yields to her lover, he grows bored of her, and every time, she takes on a new disguise, and he desires her once more. But the fourth time is different. She gives him everything except her face. He is left wanting one thing.

         

Reading, I had supposed that, because this last piece of his desire has gone unfulfilled, the fourth time would not end the way the others did. I thought this time he would hang in her web, suspended by desire, for as long as she resisted him.

But he loses interest even faster than before, after only one night together. He is resentful that she won’t show him her face, and rather petulantly resolves not to see her again. Their love affair ends soon after, this time for good.

I have an inkling of the explanation the girl will get—the only one I’ve been able to come up with. Maybe it’s a comment on the expectations placed on women, the Madonna-whore double bind. The first three times, the heroine yields to her lover, and having gotten his desire, he tires of her. The only time she successfully resists him, he is insulted, and his desire is quenched by bitterness. She is condemned as wanton if she yields, as a temptress if she resists. I’m unsatisfied by this answer; but then, this girl has never been imagined as either a Madonna or a whore.

 

She asks him all this, not giving her hypothesis.

The story surprises her again.

He says that the lover is an incurious person. He seeks pleasure, not knowledge; if an explanation is not readily provided, he does not pursue one. The heroine, by contrast, is defined by her curiosity—it is her curiosity which sets the story in motion. She first takes a disguise because she wants to find out how she will be treated in it.

This answer surprises the girl. She says that she had not considered the difference between curiosity and desire, and indeed, before now they had seemed to her synonymous. She will have to reflect.

 

We talk of other things. She turns her attention from Fantomina to his blue-grey eyes; to the dark hair on his arms; to his wide, pink mouth, almost triangular when he smiles, which is often; to the splotchy redness spreading over his neck (but not his face) as he talks about sentimental fiction. I don’t know why she didn’t think to write down the books he recommends, but I remember nearly all of them, and read most.

 

We talk for an hour. She mentions leaving, and he says, just a minute; you’ve asked him questions; now he has some questions for you. In the end, he only asks one.

 

I think I was glad after we met—it was the first sunny day in weeks, or at least it felt that way at the time. I walked to the subway in bliss. Most of the time my happiness is exhausting, passing through me like a column of fire, but that day I was amazingly tranquil.

 

I was happy, but I wrote that expressing how I felt only made me sad. I liked talking to him so much that I wished I wasn’t infatuated with him.

 

I tell my roommate that I want him worse than I’ve ever wanted anyone in my life. As far as I can tell it’s true. I am astonished not by the intensity but the depth of my feelings. I shouldn’t say I’m in love with him, but I’m in love with everything about him—everything I know about him. I’m desperate to learn more.

The week before we meet in his office, he asks, what is desire?

She waits a long time before she answers. She says desire is wanting what you can’t have. (She says a lot of other things, too; she rambles with him.)

He asks if you can desire something if you possess it.

At first she can’t tell if he’s still talking to her. She says, I don’t think so; she says that it’s the lack which feeds desire. If you possess the object of desire, you don’t want it anymore. As she speaks I picture water seeping out from my cupped fingers, the tub both filled and running.

 

He is asking in relation to Fantomina, but afterward, he doesn’t try to relate our answers to the story. The definition of desire lingers like perfume. I am dizzy the rest of class, and walk home trembling. When I ask to meet with him, he responds in under an hour.

I wanted him from the first moment I saw him, when the only resource available was my imagination. —But that’s not true: almost from the start he was material, tangible, a real part of the world.

 

First I saw an acquaintance. She smiled at me across the hall. (Maybe I should say she smiled at him, being as I am with her indubitably un-female.) Then she turned to him. When she said hello my ears perked up; I knew his name. After a few minutes she approached me, thanking me for a favour I’d done her recently, and asked if I was in his class. This was the first time he ever looked at me.

 

She told me I was in good hands. I believed her.

I can’t say I’ve thought much about love at first sight. When I’ve fallen in love before, it’s been with close friends, and my infatuations usually have a slow germination. But even as I was sitting down I was thinking, he’s going to be a problem.

 

I’m afraid the phrase first sight conjures a static image, but I love him in motion. That first day, he talked a lot with his hands; at some point he seemed to realize this, and knit his long, skeletal fingers together, and then he talked with his elbows, flapping his arms like he was making a shadow puppet of a bird. His lively eyes darted like a bird’s—all his lanky body, in fact, is rather theatrically avian, and I wasn’t sure at first that it wasn’t an affect.

 

I’ve already mentioned his smile, which is kind and a little mischievous, and near constant. He casts it extravagantly around the room. If he ever tries to be solemn, his deep, gouged dimples and flashing eyes give the lie to that pretense.

 

I think I love his voice most of all. It is warm, melodious, and non-resonant. What’s extraordinary about it is how it jumps octaves in the space of a sentence, moving between a gravelly vocal fry to a breaking high note far up in his throat—still curiously musical—and back again. Perhaps aware of this, he often ends questions with a falling tone, and for this reason, everyone hesitates after he poses them, unsure whether they really are questions.

 

This is everything I noticed about him the first day.

For a little while after our meeting, in awe of him, I defer to his explanation of Fantomina. But as I scrutinize all my memories of him—and search desperately (and largely fruitlessly) for publicly available information—I begin to suspect that he’s wrong about curiosity. It’s probably true that the lover in the story is incurious, and maybe that means he doesn’t truly desire the heroine. But real desire wants everything available to it, everything it can hold.

 

It's important to me that I know everything about him. One morning I am lying in bed when I recall the glint of a chain peeking out from beneath his shirt. It’s like he has moved a little in my mind, so that I see the little sparkle of metal, right there before my eyes. At the time I found it surprising that he would wear a chain. It reminded me of a necklace my roommate wears, with a Hebrew letter pendant.

 

I have been puzzling over his college affiliation for some time, and in that moment, the silver chain glinting in my soul, it suddenly occurs to me that he’s Catholic. The notion surprises me. Catholic—I feel very English in my shock. I absorb it quickly, working it into what I know of him. He had mentioned Gerard Manley Hopkins, whom I’ve been reading, an intensely devout poet. 

 

This is desire’s scrupulousness; but is it a function of imagination or curiosity?

If I were to paint Venus, these would be the names I would give to her attendants. I haven’t decided whether they’re co-conspirators or antagonists. They can supplement each other, and I believe they do create a unified emotion of desire, but surely there’s a difference between a delusional love and an obsessive one. The great crime ascribed to infatuation is that you fall in love with an idea of a person. But infatuation which aspires to accuracy is no less distorted, and likely more dangerous.

 

In Fantomina, the heroine is born from curiosity, but the great expression of desire—her many disguises—is fanciful. Her lover, who falls for every one of her schemes, apparently lacks either. He must desire; only it isn’t any of the personas that attract him, but rather pleasure itself. Even so, I marvel at his callousness. Is there no pleasure to be got in the revelation of a disguise?

 

Some time after our meeting, I sat for an hour in the quad below his window, reading a book he had recommended. I trembled with cold and more than cold. I was sitting there particularly because I wanted to figure out which window was his. I knew exactly how to get to his office, but I just couldn’t match it up with the long row of gables piercing the grey roof. Because I wanted him to see me, I wanted to believe that it was the room with the open window. His office had been warm. But I just couldn’t quite believe that it was as grand as that one looked—it was in the stone tower, and I was so sure that the ceiling had been sloped. I looked up at those windows for as long as I could take the cold as the sun set behind them. After I left, I wrote for a long time, recording all the evidence. I retraced the long climb up to the attic, through the narrow hallways. I became sure that the tower room was at the end of the hall, and his office was directly to the left of it. The light in that window had been dark; I’d paid it no attention. I felt mournful.

 

It is imperative that I take advantage of every opportunity I have to see him. I become forensic in my attention: I learn to angle my head so that I can dart my eyes down to where he’s sitting every spare moment. I have seen him twice a week since we met, with two exceptions.

 

The first time, I have woken early to get blood drawn. The quiet melancholy of the clinic, the cold, grey sky, and the bandaged wound in the crook of my elbow all make me feel tender and vulnerable.

 

I am getting a coffee. When I enter the café, on my left, there he is: as bright and incongruous as the sun. Suddenly I’m a girl again. His eyes widen and so do hers. His wide, smiling mouth says hello.

I have not gone to his office yet. I have not yet learned to look for him everywhere, to be constantly sensitive to his presence—across the street, in the quad at twilight, on the way to the library. I am stunned by the sight of him. I feel like I’m bleeding again. I have not quite convinced myself that I’m in love with him, but seeing him here, when I so little expected it, strikes me as an irrefutable omen of our attachment.

 

It is not a mutual attachment. I wrote, the problem which lingers is the question of me. Thinking of him, I dissolve, I am subsumed. What fills me is not myself but the image of him—not even desire, him, all the pieces I’ve so carefully collected—and I forget even that I exist.

 

I feel myself tethered to him, and when we meet, I feel part of an us. But I know it’s one-way adoration. When he looks at me I become a girl, melting and guileless, but I’m not even sure he likes girls.

 

But in his office—I do feel sure—I don’t imagine our chemistry. Chemistry is probably the wrong word. It’s more like camaraderie. He looks at her, this girl in my chair, and his eyes grow big and round, flashing with excitement. She asks him to tell her about sentimental fiction, and he asks, with some emotion, what you want to know.

He talks for a long time, more than she expects. I think he is too young to have distilled his studies into a brief, detached abstract; he speaks with the enthusiasm of an undergraduate. He says he loves unabashed seriousness. These are two of my favourite words in the world.

 

She asks if he has recommendations, and for a second time, he turns the question back on her, with that same wrung-out emotion (almost—but surely not—pleasure), asking, what do you like.

 

There can be nothing untoward here, but oh, to have those words ringing in my soul for the rest of time—never mind the fuel of desire, that’s gratifying in its own right.

 

It is these things, these tethers of connection, which keep me suspended in his office for weeks afterward. Time passes as time will, but desire preserves its glories in amber: when I remember him, it’s always in present tense. We love beginnings and we love endings, and we forget that it’s the endless middle—reading backwards and forwards—which is the domain of desire. Fantomina imagines a world where the story never has to end, where love is spun out and doubled back on itself. This is the world my memories inhabit. What does it matter if the meeting is over, if I can revisit it in my mind, if only I take the care to preserve every detail?

 

As fanciful as infatuation is by nature, I must admit I feel a little proud of my attentiveness. I wonder whether it’s possible to create a perfect love—not to say that I should be the one to do it, and certainly not with him. But with enough time, proximity, and attention, couldn’t a person fall in love completely, without that love ever being actualized?

 

I had been thinking of this, or of something very like it, the day our mutual acquaintance came into the library. I started, tried to catch her eye. She never saw me, and though I looked for her, I didn’t see her again, either.

 

This interested me. Our library is small; I didn’t think it was frequented by graduate students. If she had been there—that meant he could come, too.

And there was another thing. At the library, we could look up anyone who had a library card, and see every book they had on loan. We were allowed to do so when people forgot their cards, provided they showed us a piece of ID.

 

I am never not looking for him. In every search engine I have access to, his name appears, although to that point I had never found anything. When the idea entered my mind I felt it like a bolt of desire—that same perceptive leap, a curious airborne sensation. And just as startling: the certainty that I mustn’t do it, however I wanted to. I would be using the only power I had—never mind how inconsequential—to invade his privacy.

 

I wish I could say that this resolve meant I wasn’t tempted, that the moral superiority I took from it scoured me of curiosity. But I thought of it often. It wasn’t enough to imagine him, as I so often did; I need to know him.

 

For some time I have been looking for him in public spaces, having made note of his coat and bag. I wish I knew his gait better. How big is the world, I think, that I shouldn’t run into him a second time? I can’t look straight ahead anymore. I shoot glances at anyone in a grey wool coat, eyes big as saucers. I trip over pavement often.

 

I don’t know why, but one day, having parted from friends—after I’ve spent the entire time looking over the tops of their heads, hoping he will be there, inexplicably, impossibly—I am seized with a paroxysm of longing.

 

I am in a sloping, wooded path, dappled with sunlight. Now, though, all sensory details lead back to him. I feel a terrible pressure in my chest, a real, physical sensation. It is suddenly inconceivable that I will not see him today. I can’t bear it. I am so sure that I will see him, that I must.

I don’t, of course, and when I get home, I feel that awful grief again, missing something I’ve never had.

I dwell on the desire of Fantomina’s lover because it is so startling in its ambivalence. But a person could just as well ask why—if I am right (as I rarely am) that desire is defined by its lack—the heroine, having gotten what she wants (four times over!), continues to pursue her lover, continues to recreate the present-tense suspension of desire. I think, however, that I understand her a little better than I do her lover. It is not enough to have him; she wants to be desired by him in turn.

 

Desire, I know, is not a straight line, not a single thread running between the lover and beloved, but a shifting, labyrinthine tapestry. It is as much a quest for feeling as it is for a single object.

 

Some time ago, before I knew him, I wrote, It’s like I need someone to put myself into, an empty vessel to put love—an object of affection with the emphasis on object. I suppose an infatuation is like any other passion: gratifying exactly because it takes up our full attention. It synthesizes creative and academic faculties, the quest for beauty and the pursuit of knowledge, mobilizing them toward a single end.

 

My fancy is captivated by supposing him on the subway and the streets around campus; and I find near endless pleasure in imagining things which never happened, or which haven’t happened yet. But my curiosity is never satisfied. I think, if there’s anything, that’s what’s different this time—this choking, voracious fascination.

 

The heroine’s disguises are the workings of imagination, but they are equally a means to acquire knowledge. She is clear-eyed about her lover: she knows he isn’t true to her (because it’s her—one of many hers—with whom he’s being untrue). She knows him completely, probably better than he knows himself.

When I suggested that imagination and curiosity are in tension, my roommate averred the opposite. He said that they work in tandem, each elaborating on the other’s product: imagination leaps in where curiosity can’t stretch itself, and curiosity fulfills the best plans of imagination.

         

I think he must be right, because I’m starting not to discern between them.

         

I’ve imagined a memory. It hasn’t happened yet. It will happen one day when I’m at the library, with a rare hour alone. It’s quiet; I know I will not be caught.

         

I don’t know why I’m going to do it. I suppose I must be sick with longing, almost crazed. The temptation is too much: my resolve breaks.

         

This thing, this wanting, hungry creature inside of me, will be the one to do it, to type his name. All you need is a name.

         

There will be two pages’ worth of books, around forty in all, and this thing—this devourer—reads their titles voraciously. But I, at its shoulder, must look with some delicacy, not too close, as if that lessens the violation. I will not return to the page, and so I will not remember the list with any great accuracy.

         

Four or five editions of Tristram Shandy, but none of Clarissa. A guide to writing your dissertation. Two copies of the King James Bible—strange, inexplicable. Surprising, as people are, as knowledge is.

         

And yet, sated with this new acquisition, I will not be complete. He will not. There will be still, and always, more to know, more to imagine.

         

Afterwards I will walk home, belly empty, remembering a line from the opening of Fantomina: She was young, a stranger to the world…

I will think how strange it is, to end in the middle—and yet how fitting. Desire is all middles.

         

But maybe that’s wrong. I think maybe I’d better tell it again. I think I’d better confess to it, tell it like it really happened—like it’s true.



About the author: Gene Case is a second year student at Trinity College in the University of Toronto, studying English and Literature & Critical Theory. Their writing has appeared in Blank Spaces, Jelly Bucket, and Acta Victoriana. They are from Ottawa, Ontario, by way of Sault Ste. Marie.


Memories


 

                                                By lisa lahey



After Clarice fell over the stairs, she broke her neck and lay still. Stubborn as ever, she refused to die. Her laboured breathing filled the foyer, and I stood over her, shaking my head. I would have laughed if it wasn’t so sad.

“Really, old girl? That’s how you chose to go?”

 

She’d been upstairs in the nursery, checking on Hannah again. What was the point? Clarice knew the stairs were dangerous. The arthritis had gotten worse, and her gait was unsteady. The doctor told her to stay on the bottom floor. The woman never listened to sense, or maybe she was just tired now.

 

I left her lying on the floor and entered the living room, looking at the array of family photos on the fireplace mantel. From black and white to dazzling colour, they told a story of fifty years together. A slender brunette in a wedding dress gazed at the camera as I stood with my hair slicked back, beaming proudly beside her. I was lucky. She settled.

The years passed. Clarice beamed at me, her eyes sparkling while holding our tiny newborn, Hannah. Hannah had breathing problems, and she went straight from Clarice’s womb into an incubator. Clarice sat with her every day until we got the all-clear and brought our girl home.

 

Four years later, Clarice looked at the camera, holding our newborn son Jamie. She was weary, her eyes shadowed, tears glistening in the corners. I was the photographer. I didn’t like having my picture taken anymore. I felt exposed.

 

Despite this, Clarice insisted I pose for one last picture, holding my grandchild, another girl named Laurel. My eyes were misty with tears as I tried to keep it together for the camera.

 

My eyes filled up now. What’s the point to all this suffering? I hadn’t figured it out. Maybe I didn’t ask the right questions.

Clarice’s breathing became quieter, shallower.

“Hurry up already, old girl,” I muttered.

Clarice liked to tell me I was an impatient old goat. It was true but I hated hearing it. She’s not saying it now, but she would have if she could.

 

I heard the baby cry and raced upstairs to the nursery. The pale pink carpet was plush, and the room was as quiet as a wake. Hannah beamed at me in her crib, her tiny feet kicking in the air, her fingers in her mouth. My heart pounded as I picked her up and her head lolled back. She stopped breathing and her eyes rolled up inside her head. Did I do this? I never stopped wondering. A sheer curtain swept the memory away again. 

 

From downstairs I heard a moan, and I went to Clarice’s side. She lifted her hand to me, and I took it, steadying her as she rose.

“Took you long enough,” I kissed the top of her head.

Her face, with its wrinkles and crows’ feet, was mesmerizing.

“You’re as impatient as ever,” she pressed her hand against my face.

She looked at her crumpled body lying in repose at the bottom of the stairs.

“Did I trip?”

“You did.”

“Not a very dignified way to go,” she frowned. “Stop grinning.”

“Beats crying,” I whisper. “At least it wasn’t my fault this time.”

“Let it go, sweetheart.”

“I’m trying.”

 

We walked together from the house to a place without memories, a place I knew she would love.



About The Author: Lisa Lahey is an Associate Acquisitions Editor for After Dinner Conversation Magazine. Her short stories and poems have been published in 34th Parallel Magazine, Spaceports and Spidersilk, Ariel Chart, Altered Reality Magazine, Why Vandalism? Suddenly, and Without Warning, Five on the Fifth, and she will be published in upcoming issues of Epater Magazine, Patreon Magazine, Viva Poetica, Bindweed Anthologies, and Spadina Literary Review. More details about the author can be found here:


Looking For Dog


 

                                    By Matthew Spence


 

Jason was worried when Dog went missing one late Friday afternoon. Dog had gone off roaming before, but it wasn’t like him to be gone so late after dinner time. Even so, his parents weren’t all that concerned at first.

 

     “He’ll come home when he’s ready, and not before,” Dad said.

     “Try not to worry,” Mom added. “If he’s not home by tomorrow morning, we’ll go out and look for him.”

 

Jason nodded, feeling relieved as he ate his dinner and looked out through the patio door, waiting for Dog to come home. He’d come when he was hungry enough, Jason thought, sometimes with a neighbor who’d been kind enough to bring him home. Dog liked people, but that was part of the problem, and one of the reasons why Jason tried not to let Dog out of his sight too often.

 

Jason waited, and when he went to bed that night he lay awake in bed and looked out at the moon through his bedroom window, hoping for Dog’s safe return.

    

The next morning, Dog still hadn’t come home yet. Jason and his parents went out looking for him as they had promised to do. It was a Saturday, so most of their neighbors were home, but none of them had seen Dog. Jason thanked them and kept looking, from the edge of the woods that stood outside their neighborhood to the local supermarket parking lot where some lost dogs wound up, but there was no trace of Dog anywhere.

    

By the end of the weekend Jason was really worried. Dog was nearly ten years old, and had been with them since Jason was five. “What if he’s found somebody that he likes better than us?” Jason asked.

    

“He’ll come back,” Dad insisted. “Don’t worry. Dog has always found his way home before…”

    

The days passed. It was late summer, and the feeling of fall was already in the air. Jason’s parents put ads in the local paper, and on their Facebook pages, asking if anyone had seen Dog. As the days turned into weeks, Jason became increasingly frustrated, but still hoped for Dog’s return. He started a new grade in school, and sort of drifted through his classes, still thinking about Dog. As the seasons turned, Jason kept track of how long Dog had been gone, as the trees turned bare and winter approached. Halloween came, and Thanksgiving and Christmas, but without Dog they didn’t seem to have as much meaning. By the time winter had begun to pass, Jason really began to wonder if Dog had indeed found a new home, somewhere halfway across the country. The idea made him depressed, and more withdrawn as time passed.

    
School came and went, and more seasons as Jason got older. He went into Junior High, then high school, but by then his grades were suffering to the point where he was falling behind. He had to be put in remedial classes, and started trying “small” amounts of pot, pills, and booze. When he was seventeen he found himself on the streets, dividing his time between various shelters and hustling for drug money. Even so, Jason would still sometimes look for Dog in the old places he knew, even asking some of his old neighbors, although by then some of them had moved away as his old neighborhood began to decline. His parents found him at one of the shelters and were able to get Jason into rehab, where he was able to focus his attention. Jason was able to get a part-time job, then an internship as he completed his GED. He never stopped thinking about Dog, though, even though he knew by then that Dog had was probably gone, having lived out his natural lifespan…

    

More years passed. Jason now had a house of his own, and a patient, understanding wife. They had two kids of their own together, a boy and a girl, and the boy reminded Jason much of himself, to the point where his wife suggested getting him a pet.

    

“We should wait,” Jason said. “Maybe he’ll find one on his own. One that got lost…”

 …And might have been trying to find his way home, he said to himself.


About the author: Matthew Spence was born in Cleveland, Ohio. His work has most recently appeared in Tabi's Flash Tuesdays. More details of the author can be found here: 


Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Adonis Prison


 

                                                            By Simon Collinson


I was warned this could happen but I just didn’t listen. Just too busy looking at myself to notice. I loved myself so much I could not bear to stop looking at myself in the mirror and taking endless selfies. I would have been alright if I was discreet and private about it but in public I couldn’t help myself.

You see I was just so good looking.

I’d go past a mirror in the pub or restaurant and I’d be there for ages looking at my reflection. I would stop at a shop window to admire myself for hours. I‘d stop strangers and ask them if they agreed with me that I was the best looking person in the room. Someone informed the authorities about me. Naturally there are a lot of jealous people out there who are envious of my handsome looks.

And eventually, I was taken to the court, having been accused of crimes of vanity. The court was packed out. All eyes were on me. I loved every minute of it. The judge found me guilty of vanity on all counts. I had to plead guilty as I am really good looking.

I was given five years in Adonis prison.

Adonis prison was beautiful to look at from the outside like pristine white marble. I was taken in there by hooded guards. I could not see their faces. They wore special glasses. I suppose it was so that they would not feel down when they compared their ugliness to my stunning beauty.

The gate was locked behind me. And it was just empty. Just me in there. That's right, just me. And only me.

Everywhere I looked there were pictures and posters all of me on the walls, windows and doors. There were photographs of me everywhere. In the library all the books had pictures of me on the front, back and every page. In the canteen my picture was on the menu, the cups, plates, bowls on the tables and chairs.

The only thing on TV was my smiling face. The weekly film show was just a picture of me set to the music of Wagner. All the visitors wore masks of my face. The guards and staff all wore masks of my face upon their faces.

My cell was just walls, doors, ceilings and floors of mirrors. Every day I saw reflections of myself and only myself. I thought I looked fantastic.

I was the only inmate of Adonis prison. Everyone was looking at me. fabulous!

At first I thought it was heaven. How great it was to be able to look upon my superb looks every hour of the day? I thought I look even better in prison than I do outside. I am one of those lucky people who get better looking every day.

But after the fifth month it began to get monotonous. I could spot every single feature. Even perfection can look tedious if you look long enough at it. I grew tired of looking at myself all the time. I began to hate seeing myself everywhere. I found I was avoiding myself and staying in bed. I tried to keep my eyes shut in my cell to avoid catching a glimpse of my chiseled features.

I found that when I walked past the mirror I no longer had the urge to look at myself or take selfies.

Five years came round. It felt like five hundred. I was ready for release. Just got to go to the Artemis room for the final procedure. They strap you down as a machine cuts a big scar into your face from your ear to your jaw. They couldn’t take any chances with my astounding good looks.

I’ve been out of Adonis prison for a while now. My face is no longer perfect. It looks scary. I suppose they had to do it as I was so dishy before. It wasn’t fair on the rest of the world to have to look upon my stunning beauty. I no longer excessively love myself or admire myself. In fact I hate the person I was. He was so vain. I no longer look at mirrors or have taken a selfie in years. I wasted so much time looking at myself. I am much more productive now.

I’m glad I’m cured.



About the author: Simon is a writer from England who likes to write stories.


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