With a heavy sigh, Heidi looked once more around the room. Empty. She walked to the front window and looked blankly at the yellow moving van parked out front. Packed inside the van was her life. The life she had shared with David. The life that ended so abruptly a few months ago. As she stared at the van, all she could see was the end of her world. She willed herself not to cry.
“Are you ready?” The voice was gentle yet
coaxing. Heidi turned from the window to
stare blankly at her sister. Megan
looked intently into her younger sister’s face, searching. She needed to know how Heidi was holding up,
but she knew if she asked she’d only receive Heidi’s standard “I’m fine” in reply.
“You’re doing the right thing in moving,” Megan
began. “You’ll never begin the healing
process if you don’t move out of the house where he - where it happened.”
Numbly, Heidi could only nod. Grabbing her purse from the kitchen counter,
Heidi forced a smile. “I’ve just
double-checked all the rooms. I have everything.”
“Good,” Megan replied as they headed toward the
door. “And you got everything out of the
attic as well?”
The attic? Heidi stopped. She completely
forgot about the attic. In her grief,
though, it had been easy to overlook.
She had never even been up there.
She was afraid of heights, and David had tried unsuccessfully many times
to coax her up the ladder into the ‘room under the stars’ as he had called
it. It was his little hide-away, where
he liked to go and think, or paint, or just get away. And she never begrudged him his time
alone. Now she realized that she would
have to go up there - to his sanctuary - and take it down.
Almost in a panic, she turned to Megan. “The attic.
I can’t…I have to….David’s stuff….”. Heidi couldn’t finish her thought,
but she didn’t need to. Megan simply
asked “do you want me to come with you?”
‘Do you want me to come with you?’ Subconsciously stalling, Heidi mentally
repeated the question, formulated responses and summarily dismissed them
all. Helplessly, she looked up at her
sister, silently begging her to make the decision. Megan understood, perhaps more than Heidi,
that Heidi needed to do this alone.
Gently, she took Heidi’s arm and walked her to the hallway, stopping
underneath the attic door. Reaching up,
Megan grabbed the rope separating Heidi’s future from her past, and
pulled. Heidi watched in silence as a
stairway unfolded from the ceiling.
Strangely, her fear of heights did not surface. Perhaps it was merely hidden underneath all
the other emotions swirling within her.
At any rate, that fear was farthest from her mind. Not knowing what she would find up there,
Heidi swallowed her apprehension and climbed the stairs.
Heidi was surprised to find that the attic looked
pretty much just like any other room.
Two small windows on the far wall provided sufficient light, and the
room was orderly and modestly furnished.
So much for her notion of a dark, dusty room crammed with boxes and
knickknacks. Everything in this room was
brought up by David, everything had a reason or a story, and Heidi slowly took
in everything, wanting to know…trying to listen.
She wistfully touched everything she passed, her
fingers gently brushing items that were last touched by David. Glancing up, she saw his easel in the center
of the room. On it, a painting that will
never be finished. But it was the item
hanging from the corner of the easel that made her draw in her breath. Of all his possessions in the room, this one
thing brought David back most vividly.
It was a raccoon-tail hat, and it seemed to be calling to her. Hesitantly, she walked over to the hat and
picked it up. A smile tugged at the
corner of her lips as she recalled the first time she saw David wear it. She was in the kitchen fixing dinner when he
walked in - wearing only the hat - with the silly raccoon tail swishing about
with every jaunty step until he was standing right in front of her. Dumbfounded, Heidi looked up at him.
“Where in the world did you find that?” she asked.
“I won it in a card game with the guys,” David had
replied.
“Really? That silly thing was the prize?”
“Hey, I fought tooth and nail for this silly thing,”
said David with a grin. Heidi looked
from the hat to David’s face, and saw the mischief in his eyes. Reaching up, she gently grabbed hold of the
raccoon tail.
“You seem to have lost your clothes in that card game,”
she observed as she inched closer.
The mischief in David’ eyes soon gave way to something
else as he realized Heidi was idly running her hand up and down the length of
the tail.
“Do you like it when I stroke it?” she murmured
against his ear. His reply was cut off
as he buried his face in her neck; scooping her up, he carried her into the
bedroom, dinner completely forgotten.
Poignantly returning to reality, Heidi clutched the
raccoon-tailed hat tightly under her chin, as tightly as she was holding onto
the very memories that were threatening to send her over the edge.
‘Oh, David, I never had a chance to say good-bye’ she
sobbed, her tears falling on the soft fur, it’s color deepening as her anguish
spilled out. Shadows danced against the
walls as the afternoon faded away.
After a while both her tears and her mind were
exhausted. Heidi aimlessly wandered
about the attic, still clutching the hat as a small child would a security
blanket. David was everywhere. How could she leave this room he loved so
much? How would she ever leave him
behind? Almost as if on cue, her eyes
fell on a small, wooden game board peering out from underneath a pile of
books. Curious, Heidi walked over to it. With some amusement, she noticed it was a
Ouija board. David never fell for that
sort of thing. She wondered why he had
one up here. She picked up the small
wooden triangle laying beside the board, absently turning it over in her hands
as she continued to walk about the attic.
She had almost made it across the room when she turned with a start. She thought maybe Megan had come up, but she
hadn’t. No one was there. Heidi looked down at the wooden game piece
still in her hand. ‘No way’, she thought to herself.
She didn’t buy into that any more than David had. ‘Still….’
she thought as she made her way over to the board. Gingerly picking up the Ouija board, Heidi
walked over to the edge of the bed and sat down with the board on her lap. Questioningly, she stared at it. She wasn’t even sure how to play, yet alone
what she wanted to ask. She tentatively
placed her fingers on the triangle, then pulled them away. Then placed them back on the triangle only to
pull them away again. Taking a deep
breath, she returned her fingers to the playing piece, and kept them
there. “Will I ever be able to let go?”
she quietly asked the empty room. The
triangle began gliding slowly across the board.
Mesmerized, Heidi watched as the letters gave her the answer she needed. She remained sitting on the bed, absorbed in
her thoughts, for some time.
As the last rays of light began to fade, Heidi felt a
measure of peace wash over her. She got
up and placed the Ouija board back on the table, and gently returned the hat to
the corner of the easel. Heidi looked
about the attic. She found what she was
looking for. It wasn’t anything she
could touch, but she could take it with her.
She had found closure. With a
faint sense of hope, Heidi walked over to the window and rested her head
against the cool glass. She saw the
backward reflection of some words on the glass, and she turned to find the
source. On the wall behind her was a
framed poster that she hadn’t noticed earlier.
It was a picture of a flower garden.
She walked closer to read the quotation at the bottom of the picture:
A life is like
a garden.
Perfect
moments can be had, but not preserved
except in
memory
Heidi smiled through tears. She saw that message as a final gift from David. They had had perfect moments, but she lost them somewhere between emptying the house and loading the moving van. But she learned that she had to let go in order to find them again. She realized that moving van now wasn’t the end of the world, and that letting go didn’t mean saying goodbye. David would always live in her memory. She knew she could take out those perfect moments whenever she wanted to revisit them, but that she also had her own garden to tend.
Her eyes sought and rested on the raccoon-tail
hat. ‘Thank you, David’ she softly
whispered as she turned and walked away.
© Dahlia Ramone: May 21, 2017
This was first written in December, 2006 for Loaded
for Blog
LFB topic: “Your
topic this week is a story. You're
looking through an attic, and find something. Doesn't matter what,
just...something. Include mention of a Ouija board and a raccoon-tail hat.”
And modified
May 21, 2017 for Blogophilia Week 13.10
Topic: The End of
the World
Bonus Prompts:
Hard (2 pts):
Quote Leonard Nimoy *Easy (1 pt): Include the phrase “tooth and nail”
* “A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not
preserved, except in memory.”

Wow, What can someone say about this? Fantastic emotional write!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Blue Dude. I was trying not to be over dramatic :)
DeleteSo endearing a tale here. I am glad you saw fit to re-release this time around.
ReplyDeleteClosure in its purest form...
I'd like to eventually re-release all my writings - they were lost to an online environment when MySpace imploded :/
DeleteWho would have thought that oujia and an attic could provide the comfort and closure that she needed. Wonderful! 8 points Earthling! Marvin
ReplyDeleteI guess you find what you need, when you need it, regardless of physical location ;)
DeleteA Ouija board made it all better?...who would have thought? Those things are evil!
ReplyDeleteIrene
Haha! I've never used (played with?) one. I likely never will ;)
DeleteWow, nicely done...I love that you are rehashing your old stories, I never got to read this one. It is really good. Sad, but good. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, C :)
DeleteA wonderful tale about closure, as we all need that in our lives. This was indeed beautiful, dollface!!!! ❤ Leta
ReplyDeleteTrue, it's pretty difficult to move on with out it. Love you!
DeleteLove seeing you bring back some of these older stories - ones I missed back in the MS days
ReplyDeleteA lot of people who read my work early on, aren't around now. And a lot of new people have never seen it before. It'll be nice to have all my writings in one location.
DeleteI loved this
ReplyDeleteThanks, Stormy :)
Deletedollface, you never fail. this was sad, beautiful and wonderful. Thank you for republishing it
ReplyDeleteHey dollface - I'm so happy to see you around again. I've missed you.
DeleteAnd thanks ;) <3 <3
Fantastic story!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joleene :)
DeleteWonderful storytelling. I love it!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Barbara ((hugs))
Delete