The first thing I remember is feeling warmth from the sunlight on my back. Pressed against the hardwood floor, I was suddenly aware of how much my body ached. Slowly I got on my hands and knees and gathered the strength to stand up. As the blood rushed through my limbs so did the events from the night before. My forehead pulsed as I squinted from the sunlight.
Nothing made sense. How long was I out? Thoughts of insanity played in my head on a loop. The repetition filled me with dread. A tightness spread from my chest to my fingertips. I didn’t understand.
I took in my surroundings. My bedroom door was shut; I clearly had not been found.
The mask was missing, something I didn’t want to accept. Surely it never existed. Perhaps I had finally split the way I feared. Perhaps I spiraled down the rabbit hole, witnessing the pieces of life I lost on the way down.
There are few feelings that are so easily recalled. Smells and sounds can be tied to an exact moment in time. Sensations can even retrieve distinct memories, programmed into your senses. This I’ve only felt once.
A whisper snaked its way to my ears. It slowly spiraled around my head and I breathed the incense deeply. The smallest of whispers so naturally slid it’s way down my throat and billowed in the pit of my stomach. The anxiety burned into embers and they floated through my veins.
I felt a humming and, suddenly, a release. My thoughts quieted to silence, my mind blank. I knew my body was cold, but I could not feel it. It was as if I had taken 10 steps back into my own head, viewing life through a veiled window. Something in me understood.
I moved to stand in front of the mirror. I watched eyes blink back at me, curious and confused. Such subtle changes to my nose, eyebrows, and chin had been made. It could have been a sister with far sharper features and piercing black eyes. I felt my heart jump in my chest but I was not at liberty to act upon it. The disconnect between us was clear. My hands raised and felt around the edges of the face, unsure if it was my action or hers. The mask had melted into my skin and warped it entirely with such smooth application; it could not be undone.
The front door clicked loudly and broke my stupor. My mother had finally come home from the night before which meant I should have definitely been at school by then. The realization that I was home without my own face sunk in.
Small murmurs from my mother’s movements reached my ears – soft steps with a slight stumble, the clanging of keys on a wooden table. I felt the need to hide, but there wasn’t much choice. There wasn’t enough room under the twin bed and the closet felt too obvious. She came down the hall. I wondered if my closed door would arouse suspicion.
It was almost disappointing when she lumbered by. My breath stayed steady and quiet as she entered her bedroom and shut the door. My body stood still in front of the mirror while my thoughts ran in circles behind those eyes. The ray of sunlight slid up the bedroom door letting me know at least half an hour had passed. It was time for me to leave.
I looked at the reflection in the mirror and saw my jeans and shoes were muddy from the day before. I was damp and my skin was cold. Smoothly and carefully I approached the closet to gather some clean clothes. Every movement was methodical, everything I did was with purpose. It was all the more clear that I wasn’t alone.
I left my bedroom quietly and took care to not to make the floor creak. The snores continued through my mother’s bedroom door. The clock on the stove said 11:17. I wondered if anyone at school had noticed I was gone, I wondered if my dear friend noticed.
I prickled with heat. The fury returned, I felt it in my throat. Still, I left the house with ease. On the porch I paused to breathe the cold air in deeply.
A voice hissed inside my head where I hid behind my eyes. Their words were in a language I felt more than I heard.
Return without fear
We walked off together down the road, determined to retrace our steps. The miles passed quickly as a passenger. The rain had stopped yesterday and the air was so fresh it burned to breathe. In the distance the school approached. Lunch would begin soon, a miserable lonely affair. We wouldn’t be attending, not yet.