In a panic, I opened my
eyes, trying to shake the clammy feeling of being submerged under water. I
didn’t recognize where I was or why I was there, though I had the strangest
feeling I should. Suddenly, at my side, dark eyes peeked at me, delighted or
perhaps simply curious.
“You’re awake! I
can’t believe it!” He said, raking my hand in a familiar way that made me quite
uncomfortable. I sat up and inched away from the boy or rather, man, awkwardly retrieving
my hand.
“Who are you?” Only
three simple words and yet somehow they knocked the light right out of his eyes
and I felt horrible for speaking. The all trees around us swayed slowly in the
cool breeze, leaves rustling like a long forgotten symphony.
“Kathy.” He
whispered, its’ significance lost to me in my hazy mind. Though I searched
desperately for anything clear, only fleeting shadows appeared in my head. At
my lack of response, I could see his heart shatter, this boy man who seemed to
know me and yet was nameless.
“I’m so sorry.” He
finally said, sitting down in the dirt beside me. “I should have come back to
you sooner.” I remained silent, unsure of everything. “I was a fool! You were
right.”
An image flashed in
my mind, another man with an impish grin and something wondrous in his hands. A
name well known that just now escaped me. A bargain of some sort, and then
darkness that would take away the blazing light.
My silence did
nothing to encourage the one beside me. Moving over so that he faced me, he
tenderly looked into my eyes as though trying to search my very soul. “Kathy?”
The assurance in his voice now wavered.
Stiffly, I stood and
took a few steps in no particular direction. More images were creeping and
flashing in mind, making me dizzy. Patiently, I waited for clarity. One image,
eyes that looked at me and then turned away, leaving me behind in the light…the
light of truth. Truth that was too much to bare.
“You.” I said,
looking at the pitiful boy on the ground. “I’m this way because of you.”
He didn’t understand,
or perhpaps he was too afraid to admit he did. Though the haze still hung over
my memories, my feelings were awake. “I can’t remember…because of you.”
“Can’t…remember?” His disbelief quickly turned
to horror as he looked at the object I suddenly realized I held. A glass bottle
with only a single drop of green liquid remaining. “Kathy, you…you didn’t! You
went to….him?”
Him. The man who
grinned and promised relief from the burning truth I’d been mercilessly thrown
into. Yes, he gave me that precious glass bottle, the key to freedom, to
healing from….but I knew not what from. That was the cure.
The boy had dropped
his head into his hands, shoulders hunched as if bearing a great weight.
Perhaps he was, bearing the weight that had been taken from me by the green
liquid.
“I…well, I’m not
sorry.” I said matter of factly. “Obviously I had to do it. To be driven to a
point of such pain that the eraser of the memories was the only solution,
well…clearly it was my last hope. I assume you know whatever it is that I’ve
forgotten.”
“Kathy.” The way he
said the name, my name, as though he caressed it, treasured it above anything
else, I heard it but felt nothing. Stone cold against whatever heat drove his
words.
“I didn’t think…oh
Kathy. I thought, in my heart, you’d always be there in the end and…well, I was
scared! But I didn’t think you would…choose to forget me.”
“I knew you then?”
Indifference, plain honesty was all I felt and spoke, far more interested in
the rest of my memories, which were finally sharpening. I was Kathy. I had a
life to get back to.
“I’ll get you back.”
He was chattering, speaking more to himself than me. Standing up, he took my
hand once more and gripped it desperately.
“I should have said
this when you did, but I was frightened. A coward. But I’ll say it no; I love
you too. And whatever you’ve done, I’ll find a way to bring you back!”
I knew then, without
remembering. “I had loved you.” I said, interrupting his dreams of heroism.
“And I told you so, but you ran away.”
“Yes.” It pained him.
“But I’m not running away now. I’ll save you, bring you back and then we can
start a new life, together.”
I pulled my hand from
his and touched a steady finger to his lips, silencing him.
“Why do I need
saving?” The question startled him. “The potion saved me. Clearly I was in
unbearable pain before and now I’m perfectly well. I feel….” Looking up, I
could see in the far distance, through the leaves of the trees that sunlight
was just up ahead. “I feel happy. And
I think that’s something I haven’t felt in a long time. So I have no desire to
be ‘saved’, understand?”
Slowly, I began to
walk through the forest. “I don’t even know your name.” I said, leaving him behind
among the swaying trees, leaving the shadow of the forest to enter the light of
a new life.
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