7/31/2014

A Story A Day. Story 208 of 365: Repayment.

The sound of her mobile phone ringing interrupted her line of thought. It was Tisiphone, her sister.

-Hi, Tisi! 

-Hi, Meg. How are you?

-Been better, you? 

-I just came back to see Alecto and the baby. What happened?

Megaera explained everything to her sister, and she could hear how the fury took over her voice too. All the three sisters were more temperamental than it was good for them. She also explained her what she was planning to do. But her sister interrupted her with even a better plan. Tisi had always had the more twisted of the ideas. Megaera listened carefully and saw how what her younger sister had proposed would actually hurt him much more. 

Megaera returned to her workplace mid-afternoon and sat down with a smile of satisfaction. She pretended to be working, but she was waiting for her plan to unravel. At almost five in the afternoon she heard shouting coming from her boss' office. All her co-workers had stood up and were observing what was happening inside said office. She walked up to one of her coworkers and asked, candidly, what was happening. 

-Apparently the boss was sleeping with his secretary. The CEO of the multinational found out and didn't like it a bit, not only because he's a catholic who believes in the sanctity of marriage, but because the secretary is his daughter. 

Megaera put a horrified face and covered her mouth, trying to hide the smile that had creeped out. 

7/30/2014

A Story A Day. Story 207 of 365: Vengeance.

Yes, she would get revenge. She only needed a way to do it. Of course, the first time she thought was that she was going to kill him. It was relatively easy, and fast. But of course, Megaera didn't want to end up in jail. It needed to be something more elaborate, something that hurt him as much as it had hurt her.

During lunch time she sat on her own on a bench in a nearby park, eating her salad. She usually ate alone, so no one was surprised, or tried to join her. She stabbed the greens as if they had been her boss. How dared he tell her what he had? To her, her most loyal employee?

Megaera remembered when she first arrived at the company. It was much smaller, and she was just out from the university, her boss was not even thirty, a young enthusiastic entrepreneur. It was hard to realize it had only been four years ago. And a multinational had already bought the company, helping it grow. Her boss had retained his position, however. He was charming, and he treated her as an equal, helping her to adapt to the company, even if she was a natural loner. Actually, he was the only person she would get along with. In fact, she had perhaps become too attached to him, she had never tried anything before because she knew he was married.

It all changed when she found out he was sleeping with his secretary. If he was not faithful to his wife with one woman, he could as well be unfaithful with two. She confronted him about it, and he had literally thrown her out of his office, telling her she was crazy, and that she was lucky he hadn't fired her.

Suddenly, she knew what she had to do. She would tell his wife, she deserved to know. If he wasn't hers he wouldn't be anyone's.

7/29/2014

A Story A Day. Story 206 of 365: Revenge.

Her meeting with her boss had left her fuming. Megaera sat violently in front of her desk, and her coworkers knew it was better to leave her alone. She stared at the computer screen, infuriated, unable to think about anything, her thoughts blocked by the fury. She only left that state when a pen she was holding tightly broke, leaving her hand full of thick black ink.

-Goddamnit! What else?- she said rising from her chair and heading to the bathroom.

It was early morning, and as she passed in front of the office kitchen she saw how her boss was sitting down on a table, sharing coffee with one of the supervisors. A stab of rage went through her heart. She pushed the bathroom door, violently, and it slammed against the wall.

-Calm down, you're not going anywhere with this attitude.- she told herself, yet it was hard.

Megaera placed her stained hands under the sink and let the warm water soak them. Some of the ink immediately ran off, but there were dark stains everywhere. She took some of the liquid hand soap from the dispenser next to the mirror, and paused to look at herself. Her eyes were wild, and her hair was all over the place. Breathing slowly she washed her hands meticulously. Again and again, until her skin was red from all the rubbing but there was no trace of ink.

Before leaving the bathroom, she did her breathing ritual once more. "It will pass" she thought "he doesn't deserve you being mad like this".

However, it didn't pass. During the whole morning, the mere sight of him made a voice inside of her scream in anger, and the sound of his voice was the most annoying sound on earth. By lunch time she had decided she needed to get even, she would have her revenge.

7/28/2014

A Story A Day. Story 205 of 365: Karma.

Some people are luckier than others, and some people deserve luck more than others. Laima had always been good, but she was very unlucky. All the drawbacks happened to her, she failed on almost everything she did, no matter how hard she tried. She persisted on her objectives despite her disgrace. Despite all of this, she always had a smile upon her face and was willing to help her peers. Instead of blaming the gods for not having provided her with better fortune, she thanked them for the gift of being alive.

Laima was a very unusual person and everyone in her village loved her. The elder women used to say that her ancestors must have done something terrible for her to be so unlucky, but the truth was that no one knew which was her original family, as she had been abandoned at the stairs of the church during a cold winter morning. Everyone else in town dismissed the theory as old wives tales, and would simply tell poor Laima that her chance would change, eventually.

And indeed, it did. One summer, during the village's festivities, a witch passed through town. She announced herself as a fortune teller, but she was much more. Hortensia, who had been taking care of Laima since she was a child, convinced her to go visit the sorceress. Laima did go, but, as usual, her inquiries and wishes were for others. The crone asked her for details of her life, but Laima would always end up talking about someone else. However, the witch could see the girl's story on her eyes and took pity of her.

From the following morning, Laima's luck changed. She started succeeding in all she had failed before, yet she didn't forget all her friends, and all the people who were in difficulty. Laima thanked the gods for her newfound luck, yet she never knew that it came from a spell the witch had cast on her. One that made all her bad luck go into people who deserved it much more, making the world, maybe, a better place.

7/27/2014

A Story A Day. Story 204 of 365: Grumpy.

Aging is hard on everyone, no one wants to admit they are closer to death than they had ever been. However, being a natural process, it is something everyone needs to accept. Yet, people like Aldo had a hard time accepting it.

Aldo was in his sixties, but he still felt young, or so he thought. He ignored the multiple ailments and aches of his mature body, and tried to live his life as he had when he was twenty, he still succeeded thanks to a strict regime of exercise. He was possibly the most fit sixty-something around his town. His body resisted, but his mind did not. He failed to understand the modern culture, the modern way of life. He complained on how people nowadays were all covered in tattoos, how they would grow ridiculous beards. At first, he did it once in a while, as a casual observation. But with time, he would persist on some topics so much his son wouldn't even listen. It was hard listening to his father and realize that he was getting older. It was really hard to see that he would only go for worse, that there was no way to make him understand that complaining wasn't going to change the world, and that he needed to accept that things changed whether one wanted or not. It was hard to see that Aldo was on his way to become a grumpy old man.

7/26/2014

A Story A Day. Story 203 of 365: Whisky.

It was a warm Friday summer night. Nick found himself alone at his place with no kind of plans whatsoever. All his friends had left for far away places, leaving him stranded in his hometown. Nick was used to loneliness, he had based his lifestyle on it. However, even hermits needed company from time to time. And that was one of those times. 

Nick sat on his balcony, looking at the stars, wondering if they ever felt lonely, if they wished they had company. It was a silly thought, of course, stars didn't have feelings. No one was alone, except him. The sounds of the forest surrounding his place arrived to his ears, a song of summer nights. It made him feel even more lonely. 

Walking up to the kitchen, he returned to the balcony with a bottle of whisky, a bucket of ice cubes, and a glass. He put everything on the table and sat back on his chair. Nick oppened the bottle with expectation, it was fine Scottish whisky, one of his few caprices. After putting some icecubes in the glass, he poured himself half a glass of Scotch. The first sip had always made him better, but, that night, it only made him feel more lonely. He took another one, it warmed him inside, but it only made her remember there was no one around. 

Nick nursed his loneliness with the bottle of liquor. The lower the bottle was the lonelier he felt. Until both him and the bottle were completely empty, and tears of solitude dripped from his sad eyes. 

7/25/2014

A Story A Day. Story 202 of 365: Naïve.

People usually think that being naïve is a good trait for girls. Girls need to be naïve and sweet, because if they're strong-willed they become wild. However, in reality, being naïve was a torture, as Tam found out. She had always been really innocent, and willing to see the best of the people, not realizing when people meant something else or wanted to obtain some profit from her.

Still, on the field she was worse was in love. Tam would never know when a boy was trying to make a romantic approach on her, so she usually just assumed they were nice because they were always nice. She would think like that until someone else pointed out that the boy in question did actually like her. After that she would go crazy, trying to make sure he liked her, that it was not just her crazy friend. If she liked someone she would be too scared to make the first move. If she talked to the guy she liked, she would always be childishly honest, and the boy would grow tired. That's what happened most of the time, men would think she was not interested, and they would flee. Leaving Tam alone with her innocence.

7/24/2014

A Story A Day. Story 201 of 365: Volley.

I could hear their laughter. They were playing in the sun, on the sand. I got closer to the window and I could see how they were playing beach volley. The sun rays were caressing their young bodies, making their skin tan.

The sea was calm, and blue, stretching to the horizon. The sand was golden, shining under the sun. Their laughter and the waves crashing mixed their sound. I looked longingly, wishing I was there. I closed my eyes and pictured myself playing with my friends, jumping on the sand, stretching my arms towards the sky. I opened my arms again, and I was still inside the house, but for one short glorious moment I had been outside, the air messing with my long hair.

I wheeled myself apart from the window, there was no point in dreaming, there was no chance I could play with them again.

7/23/2014

A Story A Day. Story 200 of 365: Narcissus.

-So, Mr. King, could you tell me a bit about yourself?

-You said this was for a magazine? You'll also need some pictures, for sure.

-Yes, yes, we will take care of this mater later.- the interviewer replied.- But first tell our readers a bit about yourself.

-Well, I am a musician, I started playing the piano when I was three and I've practiced unceasingly since. I wanted to become the best piano player in the world, and right now I can say I have finally accomplished my objective. I have the perfect balance between passion and technique, and the public loves me. However, the critics are jealous of my talent and they always write bad reviews about my concerts, they are too narrow-minded to understand my music.

-So, you say people loves your shows,...

-They do! You should see the emotion on their faces, it's mesmerizing. Everyone loves me! And the girls,... don't get me started with the girls,... I have to shoo them away as if they were flies!

-Is there any special girl in your heart?

-No, not yet. I still have to find someone who understands me fully, who is as passionate, as perfectionist as I am. I am basically saving myself for the female version of me, and if she never comes along, so be it.- he looked at his reflection on the wall-wide mirror.

-Good luck with that, then. Let's go back to your professional life. What are your future goals?

-Right now, I'm on a retreat, relaxing, and listening to myself to find the music in me that needs to be heard by the rest of the world. I hope that, of these few months of meditation, I'll get a whole new album that I'm going to release with my record company. After that I'll do an international tour, visiting some of the most famous cities of the world. I know my fans are eager to listen to my new music.

-To end the interview, would you like to say anything to your fans?

-Yes, I want to tell them I love them almost as much as I love myself.

The interviewer left the room and left him alone inside the mirrored room. On the other side, looking through the one-way glass, the team of psychiatrists and nurses were staring at Mr.King, astonished. After a while, one of the doctors broke the silence.

-Nor only is he completely tone-deaf, he's clearly delusional and a narcissist.- she announced.-He doesn't even realize he's in a mental ward!


7/22/2014

A Story A Day. Story 198 of 365: Alternate.

Carmen woke up terribly hung-over. She would never again go out drinking with Silvia, her friend got the worst out of her. The sun had already risen and was shining through the open blinds, which she had obviously forgotten to close the day before. She shifted in bed, trying to get some more sleep and discovered she wasn't alone. Carmen didn't remember him, and of course she didn't remember taking him home, but at least she was relieved to see that drunk her did have some good taste in men. The guy sleeping on her bed looked about her age, he had brown hair, thick eyebrows, and a thousand freckles. His eyes were shut, so she couldn't see the color, but he had the longest and thickest eyelashes she had never seen. A five o'clock shadow covered his jaw. She lay there, looking at him, wondering what she should do when a baby started crying. That was like a sign for him to open his eyes. Blue, they were blue.

-Hi, honey, are you awake already?- he said sleepily.- Don't worry, I'll get Lucas, you had a long night yesterday. Sleep some more, I'll make us breakfast.

He left the room leaving her alone. The walls were full of pictures of them both, there was one where she was wearing a wedding dress. She was married? When did that happen? At what point between the previous night and that morning did she meet that guy, marry, and, apparently, have a baby? She went back to sleep hoping it all was a nightmare. But, when she woke up again, she did so to the smell of pancakes. The room was still the same, and the guy who had been sleeping next to her was smiling at her leaning on the door frame, whilst nursing a, what looked like, 6-month-old baby with his same blue eyes.

In the meantime, another Carmen was searching frantically around her house, that wasn't her house, for her husband and her baby boy.

A Story A Day. Story 199 of 365: Realities.

When Carmen woke up she felt as if she hadn't slept at all. She looked at the window and saw that the sun was already out, but that meant nothing, she had arrived home late from her shift at the hospital, so she could have actually slept less than three hours. She shifted in bed and turned to Ricardo's side, to see if he was still sleeping. However, there was no one. Half asleep, she thought that maybe he had gone to the bathroom, and she fell back to sleep immediately.

She woke up some hours later, feeling that something was amiss. At first, she couldn't identify what was it, but when she was fully awake it struck her, the house was eerie quiet. At that hour Lucas should have cried, and Ricardo would be making his famous breakfasts. But there was only silence. She looked around, at the painted bare walls. Bare walls! Where were all her pictures? She climbed out of bed and started seeing signs that Ricardo was not around. In fact, it was as if he had never been. She ran around the house into Lucas room, but there was no Lucas room, it was a painting studio, full of abstract paintings. What was going on? When did Ricardo leave her? When did he take their son with him? When did she take up painting? She was standing on the doorway, confused, when the phone rang. She went back to her room and fumbled through a purse must have been her own, although she didn't remember buying it. She answered without looking at the caller ID.

-Hi! How are you sweetie? How's the hangover?- a high-pitched woman's voice asked her from the other side of the line.

-Sorry, who are you?

-Silvia, dear. It's me, Silvia. Oh, you really are terribly hungover, aren't you? I told you a thousand times, you shouldn't drink so much. Anyway, do you remember you have the art exhibit today, right? I'll see you at the gallery.

Carmen didn't even have time to say another word. Who was that woman and what did she want from her? Was she a victim of some kind of amnesia? What was going on?

In the meantime, a terribly hungover Carmen was having breakfast with Lucas and Ricardo, as clueless as she was.

7/20/2014

A Story A Day. Story 197 of 365: Summit.

Just a bit more. The summit is just around the corner. That was what Lucy would tell herself on her way up. Pedal a bit more. Making her legs work hard and harder. Some other cyclists passed her swiftly on their way up, working hard themselves, but climbing comfortably. She could feel her legs hurting, complaining because of the ten kilometers of uninterrupted ascent, screaming for some flat kilometers to recover. She was going so slowly, she was on the verge of falling, she would probably go faster if she walked, but she was stubborn, and she would climb that mountain ridding her bike even of that was the last thing she did. 

The sun was strong on her back, making the sweat run under her shirt. She took a sip of water. Looking ahead there was only the dirt path, and no sign of where it ended. Some meters ahead the path would take a turn and continue under the trees. Lucy was relieved, the slope was equally steep, but at least the sun wasn't annoying her. A bit more, she thought, after the next turn you'll be able to see the top. 

Her feet went up and down, and up again, following a circular motion. She couldn't feel her legs anymore, she couldn't feel anything. She and the bike were one, fighting against the hill. Suddenly, the slope became less step. Lucy looked ahead and saw there was nothing else. No more mountain, no more path. She climbed off her bike, her legs shaking. In front of her the reason she had gone there in the first place, the city on her feet, and, further at the horizon, the sea. 

7/19/2014

A Story A Day. Story 196 of 365: Trains.

Chère Hélène,

I have been waiting for you at the train station. For years. Listening to the electric noise the lines made. Listening to the announcements on the PA. Listening to the trains braking. Hoping you would be on the next one. But you never were.

I don't know if you still remember the first time you came here. You were four, maybe five. You looked excited, it was a whole new world. You still couldn't understand the language, and kept asking your mother, in a sweet French, what did the people say. You looked so much like her, and I bet you still do, both with red hair and blue eyes. I couldn't see a trace of your father in your face, and it made me sad, because you were the only thing left of him. I went to pick you and your mother up, to guide you around the town, the only surviving sibling of your father, the youngest of them all, only ten years older than you, yet I had the weight of the world on my shoulders.

I remember you, stumbling down the stairs of train, eager to meet the part of your family you didn't know. Eager for that summer of adventures, now that the war was finally over. You had never seen the sea before, and your cruise across the English Channel hadn't been exactly pleasant. But our beach received you gold and wide, our sea blue and calm. That summer you spent more time inside the water than you did outside. Your pale skin was soon covered in freckles, and your red hair gained blond highlights. You looked happy, as if you had never heard the sound of a bomb dropping. You helped me too, I was still a child in the end, but the death of all my brothers, all of them leaving widows and children behind, and two elderly and flailing parents, made me a woman ahead of time. When I was with you I could be carefree, a child again. I taught you English and you replied in childish French, by the end of summer we already had our own language made up of half-whispered secrets.

You'd return every summer. Screaming my name before the train had ever stopped. You grew fast, so fast. And I grew too, but the bond we had only became stronger, we used to joke that it was because we shared our first name, but it was stronger than that. You were my confident, and I was your guide. We talked about boys while tanning on the beach. Soon enough you had your own share of pretends.

Do you remember how I got married in summer so you could be my maid of honor? Remember that blue dress you wore? It went with your eyes. I hope you still keep it. You joked that our children would be like me and you. That they would have English brothers to visit.

Yet, something changed from one year to the other. The following year I was pregnant of my first child, Maria, but I still came to receive you. However, you were no longer excited to see me. All the boredom in the world was painted on your face, and you didn't do anything to hide it. You refused to speak English, and complained about every little thing in the town. You had recently moved to Paris and the city had gone to your head. You avoided the sea you had always loved, staying indoors most of the time, keeping your sickly appearance. We didn't even talk, every time I tried to approach you, you refused me. You left earlier that year, complaining about how the air of the sea made you sick. Your mother appologized concerned about you, and promised to return the following year. She did, but you never did.

I would go pick your mother up every year, hoping she wouldn't come alone. Hoping you would have changed your mind. But you never came. She would tell us how you had finished your studies in the Sorbonne, how you had married, and when you had your first child. She was proud of you, but she would never reply when we asked her why you never came. I always expected you to appear with your kids so they could play with mine. But you never did.

When your mother died, no one would tell us what the news where anymore. I still remember the telegram you sent to tell us about her death. The coldness behind it, as if we weren't family. What did we do that upset you so? And the letter you sent me, some years later, notifying me of your change of address just in case I needed to tell you something.

And I do. I need to tell you that even after your mother died, even after all these years, I still go to the train station looking for your train. Hoping to catch a glimpse of your red hair. Hoping to hear your voice calling out my name once again. The train station has changed a big deal after all these years, as I have, but for me it will still be the same train station.

My grandchildren think I'm crazy, most of my children think the same, but they're too polite to say it out loud. But I'm not crazy, I just want to see you once again before I die.

Hélène, please come back.

Yours,

Hellen.

7/18/2014

A Story A Day. Story 195 of 365: Silk.

When Tania was a child she would already design dresses and other clothing for her dolls. She had never liked the clothing that used to come with them. Of course, her passion became her job eventually. Her designs were edgy, feminine but comfortable, and empowering. She was against clothes that made women feel as if they were wearing a cage, or that made them feel uncomfortable with her body. She designed clothes for all body types, allowing all the women to love their bodies. Her body-positive attitude made her designs extremely popular.

As usual, success lead to offers from big fashion companies. She rejected all of them, once and again, because she didn't agree with their ethics. However, at one point, when her parents were hit with financial trouble, she gave in and accepted to work in a famous company. Her bosses agreed on letting her work as she used to. Soon enough she saw how her designs began to be modified, and she couldn't say anything about it. Tania endured the situation for some years, feeling hurt and betrayed, but saving the best ideas for herself. As soon as she could she quit her job, and went back to her original style, creating her own label, a label all women could rely on.

7/17/2014

A Story A Day. Story 194 of 365: Model.

Beauty had always been her main feature. Linda had never been the brightest child, she always passed her exams, but with plain Cs most of the time. She wasn't funny either, she was nice, she was sweet, but she didn't have an outstanding personality. However, her looks were outstanding. She had white porcelain skin, long brown hair, that flowed silkily down her back. Her most prominent trait were her eyes. They were the color of the ocean on a calm day, neither blue or green, but both. She was a beautiful child and she blossomed into an extremely beautiful woman soon enough. When she was fourteen she was already taller than her father, naturally thin, and with a body many older women would have desired.

When she was approached by a modeling agent at the mall, no one was surprised by it. Her parents encouraged her to pursue the career, and she entered into a spiral where everyone told her how beautiful she was. At first she loved it, she was a teenager after all, and being able to wear all those clothes, make-up, and shoes, it was a dream come true. After some years, however, she started to feel ignored, no one cared how did she feel, they only cared about how did she look. She was only a doll for grown-ups, and she hated herself for having become one.

7/16/2014

A Story A Day. Story 193 of 365: Taste.

Imagine being born without the ability to taste. Hard right? That's what had happened to Dina. She had never been able to taste anything. If she had been able to know the flavors of things, she would have probably missed it. But to her everything was the same, she could eat anything without a flinch. Her mother saw the bright side of it quite quickly, as Dina would eat any kind of food she gave her, even vegetables and fish. However, that proved to have a downside too, as she would eat anything that had the right texture, even if it was not edible. At some point, Dina's mother tried to find a solution for her daughter's condition. But after consulting several doctors, she found out that her daughter's affection was genetic and incurable, so they would need to learn to live with it.

With time she started wondering what would savor be like, specially because she could see people around her enjoying food. She started thinking that maybe there could be some kind of machine that would allow her to know how things tasted, but no one had encountered her problem before. As she grew she saw that the only way to obtain it was if she did it herself. And she decided to study bio-enginery. When she was 32, she already owned her own company dedicated to make life easier for people like her, and she had long been able to know how food tasted like.

7/15/2014

A Story A Day. Story 192 of 365: Sudden.

Voicemail
Thursday, December 8 2011. 2:05 PM.

"Hi mom, can you pick me up when you get out of work? There's a bus strike and I won't be able to get home. Call me back to tell me something."

Voicemail
Thursday, December 8 2011. 5:17 PM.

"Mom, are you out of work already? It's cold and I'm freezing. C'mon pick up the phone!"

Voicemail
Thursday, December 8 2011. 6:21 PM.

"Mom, Lisa is taking me home. You really need to learn to switch on the phone when needed. See you at home!"

Voicemail
Thursday, December 8 2011. 7:55 PM. 

"Where are you? It's getting late!"

Voicemail
Thursday, December 8 2011. 8:35 PM.

"Mom, I'm freaking out, are you okay? Please call me back. Where are you?"


*Phone ringing*

-Mom?
-Ruth? Are you home?- a voice at the other end asked alarmed.
-Tina? Yes, I'm home.
-Don't move, I'm coming over.

*Doorbell*

-Tina? What's wrong?
-Ruth, let's go inside, sit on the sofa.
-You're worrying me.- Ruth said as she sat down.
-Listen, Ruth, this is going to be hard.- the older woman breathed in.- Your mother had an accident this afternoon while running errands, she had left her documentation at work so no one knew who she was.
-What do you mean by an accident? Is she okay?
-A bus tried to brake on a patch of ice and slipped. Your mother happened to be on the wrong place.
-How badly injured is her?
-Ruth,...
-What?
-Your mother is dead.
-No. No. No. It can't be. My mother is not dead.
-Ruth,...
-You're lying! You're lying! My mother can't be dead!

But she was, and she was never able to bid farewell as she would. Her mother was dead and she had a hole in her heart larger than her own heart was.

7/14/2014

A Story A Day. Story 191 of 365: Walk.

"I think the change started after the accident. Bidane realized she had to change her life, take profit of her body while she was young. She had never liked doing sports, but the doctor advised her to stay active to accelerate the recovery, so she started walking along the beach in Donostia. It was summer, so it was pleasant most of the time. The first days she would walk a little and sit on the first bench she could see, her leg still hurt too much to walk more. It took her a long time until she was able to walk a full kilometer without stopping, enough time to start liking it. I could see how she would look forward to her walk, and how happy she looked when she returned. I used to tease her, telling her she had become an old woman, but she never became mad at me. When fall came she could walk much better, and despite the rains and the wind, she continued her daily strolls. By spring, the following year, she was already able to climb up a mountain, and after that her progress accelerated. That same summer she decided to do the "Camino de Santiago", I went with her, and I could hardly keep up with her pace."

"So, it didn't come as a surprise when she announced she wanted to cross Europe by walking."

"Well, in a way yes. We knew she loved to walk, but she also loved her work. Seeing her leave her job to follow such a strange dream was... unexpected to say something. Don't get me wrong, I'm proud of her, but I was surprised when she said she wanted to take a whole year off and wander around."

"What did your family think about it?"

"Our mother wasn't to happy, she was concerned about Bidane's well-being, she was afraid something bad would happen to her and we would never know. Our father was supportive, he said that if he had been younger we'd have joined."

"And what do you think about it? How is your relationship with your sister?"

"Surprisingly, much better. We were always close, but somehow we've grown closer. Is as if I walked beside her everyday."

7/13/2014

A Story A Day. Story 190 of 365: Museum.

Art is subjective, the piece one person loves the most, is the one another dreads. The same scene can trigger a thousand different reactions, the same painting can make someone feel grossed out and fascinate someone else. That night, at the museum, there was people of all kinds, however, when it came to the religious paintings depicting martyrdoms, everyone agreed. Those paintings were painful to see, and hardly anyone stopped to look at them for more than one second. Except this girl, I had seen her looking at the portraits, intendedly but disappointedly. Still, she took some notes on a notebook she was carrying. As soon as she arrived into the martyrdom scenes, her face lit up, she would examine every scene to the latest detail, spending ten or more minutes on each painting, taking notes frantically, looking at the pieces from every possible angle. Sometimes she would even sit on the floor writing something, not minding about the people surrounding her. I was a bit worried about her, at one point she even gasped in excitement at a particularly cruel painting. I started to wonder whether she was a dangerous maniac, or an assassin. Who else could love so much that kind of scenes?

As it turns out I had the opportunity to discover it sooner than I thought. The closing hour had arrived and she was still sitting on the floor in front of one of the biggest paintings in the museum, she had spent around twenty minutes already on that one, and I could see why, it had everything from skinning to boiling people alive, and several other forms of torture. I walked up to her and told her it was time to leave, that the visiting time was over.

-But I haven't finished, yet!- she said in a child-like manner.-Can I have five more minutes?

-Rules are rules. Why are you so interested on these paintings anyway?

-I'm a writer, I need new ways to kills my characters.

7/12/2014

A Story A Day. Story 189 of 365: Park.

Peeking between the glass and the concrete, the blue and the grey, there was some green. It looked out of place in the middle of the city, yet, nothing could drive it away. Chloe would look at the leaves wishfully when she was stressed out. Her window didn't allow her to see much of the park, yet it was enough to give her hope. On sunny days, as soon as she had finished her job, she would walk down the street to the park. Every step allowed her to see more, and with every step she was able to smell the mixed scent of leaves and wet earth. Soon enough she would see the iron gates and the statues welcoming the visitors.

As soon as she would step into the park, the city disappeared. The tall grey buildings didn't matter anymore, the cars didn't matter, the only thing that mattered was the grass, and the trees, and the flowers. The park was different every day, there was music, and there were toddles dancing at it, they had the most fun. There were groups of people doing sports, people running, people riding bicycles. There was people meditating, doing yoga. Basically there was people everywhere, taking profit of the island of peace the park was. Chloe just walked around, looking at everything, soaking in happiness. She stopped at every water fountain to listen at them. She caressed the oldest trees, finding the energy she needed for the week. As her stroll arrived to an end, she would slow down her stride, wanting to make those last moments last forever. And then she would return to the city, deciding to ignore all the noise that surrounded her, because she was still soaked with the spirit of the park.

7/11/2014

A Story A Day. Story 188 of 365: Listen.

One can learn a lot from listening. Normal things, secret things, even unspeakable secrets. Tina had learnt that long time ago, and she had perfected her listening skills. People usually talk too much, thinking their words will be lost as soon as they finish saying them, and that is what usually happens. Unless Tina is around, that is.

Thanks to her listening skills, Tina had been able to take herself out of difficult situations, yet, most of the times she just stored the secrets she had collected in a special part of her brain, in case she did need them. That wasn't necessarily a good thing, as her extraordinary listening capacity wasn't paired with a proper sense of ethics, and more than once she heard someone confessing a crime and never did anything about it. Not even plans for murder would make her look twice, she was basically a useless vigilante, throwing away her talent. And she didn't care.

7/10/2014

A Story A Day. Story 187 of 365: Agoraphobia.

She always had the same dream. She was in the middle of a street, she had to hurry to get somewhere, although she never remembered where. However, the street was crowded, everyone moving on the opposite direction at she was. At first, she would elbow her way through the people, advancing some meters, at some point, she would start to feel anxious, and her strength would diminish to the point she ended up carried away with the crowd. First, on her feet, afterwards, dragged along, and in the end thousands of feet would crush her body. She always woke up with the pain of her bones breaking, covered in sweat.

As soon as she was calm again, she would stand up and look through the window to the empty street. She knew the following day would be one more in which she would not be able to leave the house. One more of many.

7/09/2014

A Story A Day. Story 186 of 365: Mail.

From: Unknown 
To: Cordelia Smith
_________________________________________________________________

Repent
August 13th, 2010 at 5:07 AM
_________________________________________________________________

I remember what you did. Repent!

_________________________________________________________________

From: Cordelia Smith 
To: Unknown
_________________________________________________________________

Re: Repent
August 13th, 2010 at 9:31 AM
_________________________________________________________________

I am sorry, but I think someone gave you the wrong e-mail address, I don't know what you are talking about. 

Cordelia
_________________________________________________________________

From: Unknown
To: Cordelia Smith
_________________________________________________________________

Re: Re: Repent
August 13th, 2010 at 9:34 AM
_________________________________________________________________

Of course you know Cordelia, don't you remember what happened five years ago? 
_________________________________________________________________

From: Cordelia Smith
To: Unknown
_________________________________________________________________

Re: Re: Re: Repent
August 13th, 2010 at 10:49 AM
_________________________________________________________________

Who are you? What do you want? Leave me alone, I have my own life now. 
_________________________________________________________________

From: Unknown
To: Cordelia Smith
_________________________________________________________________

Re: Re: Re: Re: Repent 
August 13th, 2010 at 10:57 AM
_________________________________________________________________

You will find out who I am soon enough, and I want you to repent for what you did. 

Don't lie to me, again, I have been watching you, I know you don't have any kind of life, I can see you right now staring at the phone, wondering if you should call the police, but what are you going to tell them? You're the only one who will be able to see me. Such a deep, deep love. 

I've been watching you, like I used to, remember that? Good times, right? I still watch you when you sleep, hoping that one day I'll have the strength to strangle you in your sleep. Dying of suffocation is a curious experience. I can tell. 

7/08/2014

A Story A Day. Story 185 of 365: Sometimes.

I have always been shy, and when I'm in new places I'm just worse. Much worse, I become afraid of everyone, I think everyone is judging me, and I never consider cool people would like to hang out with me because I'm so uncool. However, apparently, I'm not, or no one else considers me to be, and I'm always caught off guard. Like that time with Sue.

I was scared of Sue, she was so serious and so confident, I didn't think we could possibly have anything in common. So when she approached me I was terrified, I seriously though she would eat me.

-Do you want to go for an ice-cream after work?

-What do you mean go for an ice-cream?- it was a stupid question, but she had startled me.

-You know what an ice-cream is, right?

-Of course, it's just,... yes, I'd love to.

It ended up being one of the most fun afternoons I've ever had, we connected instantly, and talked about everything and about nothing. That was the start of a long-lasting friendship. Some years later I confessed to her that I had been afraid of her, that I almost hadn't know how to react, but that I was glad I had accepted to go with her. She just smiled and replied.

-Sometimes, an ice-cream is just an ice-cream.

7/07/2014

A Story A Day. Story 184 of 365: Polite.

Her mother taught her to be polite with everyone, telling her to look deep in the heart of the people, where she would be able to find warmth. She would tell her not to care about the looks, or the attitude, because one could never know what that person had been through. It lead to some uncomfortable situations, however, like on that exact moment.

Jules was the new guy at work, he was awkward, nerdy, and wore thick glasses. Too much of an stereotype, on top of that everyone laughed at him. Of course, she was polite to him, because his life was hard enough. And, of course, he took it the wrong way.

-Paula, I need to tell you something.

-What do you want, Jules?- she asked as she sat down on a chair in the common room.

-I really like you, Paula.- he said with a stutter.

She sighed.

-Jules,...

-Don't tell me you don't like me, you're the only person in this office who is nice to me! You have to like me!

-Jules, I like you, but not in the way you want, not in the way you like me. I think everyone deserves to be liked.

-But, but,... it's not true, it can't be.

As he left, Paula blamed her politeness for yet another broken heart.


7/06/2014

A Story A Day. Story 183 of 365: Accident.

Melissa called me that afternoon, she worked later than I did, so she always called in case she needed to stop and buy anything for dinner. She sounded excited, but she would get easily excited for the silliest reasons, so I just told her we didn't need anything, and to come home. After hanging up, I sat on the sofa and waited for her, I had the dinner on the oven, my masterful lasagna, and had set up the timer so it would turn off when it was cooked. I lay on the sofa and fell asleep, I had started working at 6 am that day and I would be starting work at the same hour the following day.

I was woken up by the doorbell, at first I didn't even know where I was, but then I realized I was still sleeping on the couch. I looked at the time and saw it was late, much later than the usual time Melissa used to arrive. I stood up to open the door, thinking I would tease her for forgetting her keys again. Only it wasn't her.

-Son, I have bad news. I need you to come with me.- it was the old sheriff, who had seen me grow up.

-Is it Melissa?- I asked, feeling my heart shrinking.

He didn't say anything, but the sadness in his eyes confirmed my fears. He drove me, in silence to the morgue, were her body was lying cold on a colder table. I shed all the tears in the world and more, but nothing would bring her back. Her life had left the moment another driver decided to skip a red light. It had been an accident. A stupid one.

Just last week, after more than a month of having buried her, was I brave enough to go through her things. Her favorite purse, the one she was using the day of the accident. There was an envelope from the hospital, I opened it, and with shaky hands I discovered I hadn't buried one person a month ago, I had buried two.


7/05/2014

A Story A Day. Story 182 of 365: Diet.

There are hard times, and there are times when you are forced to forego something you love. For medical reasons, Miela had to avoid eating any sweet food for a whole month. It was not an easy feat for anyone, but Miela had a sweet tooth. In fact, sweets were her life, she baked daily, and it was her main form of income. She would bake the craziest cakes, and post the recipes and pictures on her blog. She became so famous, she obtained a book deal. So, as said, sweets were her life, she wouldn't eat much of what she baked, but she needed to taste the frostings and others to be sure everything tasted good.

The first day she surprised herself about to eat something she was not supposed to eat more than a couple of times. By the end of the first week, she had already grown used to it. The second week proved to be harder. Miela found herself craving anything, even meringue which she didn't particularly like. She endured one more week before becoming all cranky. Her relationships resented of it, her boyfriend decided to move back to his parents for some days, her friends avoided seeing her. When her boyfriend came back home after the month had past, and Miela had undergone the tests she needed, he found her dozing out in front of a mountain of cakes, cupcakes, and thousands of other sweets.

7/04/2014

A Story A Day. Story 181 of 365: Friends.

The three of them had been friends since school, long time ago. They were really different, but shared a common animosity against their old school. They would try to meet once a year, to keep posted on what was going on with their lives. One of them was quite a traveler, she couldn't stay in the same place for too long, and she usually had to travel back home for their yearly meeting. She was open minded, honest, and carefree. The second one was a sweet girl who valued family and traditions over anything, she never spoke a bad word of anyone. She had already settled down and married, and was looking forward forming a family. The third one was a mix of both, she was brutally honest, yet family was also one of the most important things in her life. She was a feminist, an truly believed women could do anything. She was a strange person, full of contradictions, but she was lovable all the same.

Every time they met they had lots of fun, but each of them went home wondering how they could be friends of someone who was so different from them, only to realize that friendship is about embracing diversity.

7/03/2014

A Story A Day. Story 180 of 365: Weddings.

Miranda was the first of my friends to get married. I was 23 and she was 29, the older sister I never had. I was very excited at her wedding, being it the first one I was attending as an adult. Everything looked beautiful and romantic to me. I was sitting on a table full of single people, most of them around my age, cousins and siblings of Miranda. We drunk and we joked, and the old ladies would tell us, the girls, that we would be beautiful brides in our day, too.

Susanna was the second, a couple of years after, she had been my friend since childhood and she had been dating her now husband for eight years. As maid of honor I became really involved in the wedding, her mother kept telling me it would get practice for when it was my turn. I was very emotional that day, I remembered all the good times we had together and I cried. We hugged, and we danced, and we laughed like children.

Hellen, my little sister, was next. When she told me, I told her I was happy for her, but a part of me thought she was too young. She was only 22 after all. Yet, I only have one sister, and if that was going to make her happy, I had no right to complain. During her wedding everyone seemed to think it was convenient to remind me I was the older one, so I should have gotten married before Hellen. 

Next were Elisa, Beth, Ruth, and Louise. All on the same year, when we were 27. In each occasion I was teased on how I would be the following one. 

But I wasn't. Jason followed them, one year later, the first one of my male friends to get married, the most unlikely of them all. A known cheater and womanizer had been tamed by a girl who looked as if she had never hurt a fly. I had lots of fun during that wedding, Jason's friends were all goofballs. I also hooked up with the best man, but it was a short-lived fling, although both Jason and his wife were hopeful my wedding would come out of theirs. 

My 29th year on earth was also a wedding-packed one. Everyone told me I needed to hurry and find a good husband or it would be too late for me. I simply ignored everyone's remarks. I had had my share of weddings already, I didn't think anyone else needed another one, specially not mine.

At some point everyone stopped caring whether I got married or not, it was a relief, because, sincerely, I had no wish to marry. 

7/02/2014

A Story A Day. Story 179 of 365: Poor.

No one knew Dan was poor at his new school. He didn't walk around pretending to be rich, but he simply tried not to attract attention, he would dress plainly in clean clothes, and only an expert eye would be able to detect that those clothes were hand-me-downs. He was an active member of the school, but he only took part in the free events. A sports scholarship had given him the opportunity to attend that school, so as a promising athlete most students were keen to overlook some of the signs of his poverty. Yet, it also meant he would get invited to many things he couldn't afford. He had learnt long ago that going out for dinner one night, meant his family would have trouble making ends meet. Every time he had to decline an invite, it made him hate more being poor. It was a stab in his heart. Lots of days he would walk back home, alone, his head down, crying, determined to get out of the pit poverty was.

7/01/2014

A Story A Day. Story 178 of 365: Montréal.

Almost five years ago I took a plane and flew to Montréal,
I "lived" there for a month and a week,
so I don't really know if I can say I lived there.
Regardless,
it was one of the most eye-opening experiences in my life.
 Because today is Canada Day, I'm writing this short story to honor my time there,
the things I lived,
and the city I will always have in my heart.
Montréal, one of my homes away from home.



Laura was only twenty-one when she took a plane on her own for the first time. She had left her parents and her brother at the boarding gate, waving farewell, telling her they would see her in a bit more than a month. She was excited, but also terrified, she had never been alone for such a long time, she had always been independent, but that was a whole different thing. She jumped on the airplane, carrying her laptop, her camera, and a dozen of books. She also carried a notebook, where she had started writing a novel about a year before. 

The truth was, she had needed that trip much more than she could ever think. Light rain welcomed Laura to the city, and a taxi took her to what was going to be her place for that time. She looked through the window, wide-eyed, but jet lagged. It was such a big place, how would she find her way around, if even the taxi driver couldn't? Her apartment was close to a street that would be closed for the summer, to her it was unbelievable they could close such an important street for so long. 

During that month she walked her way through Old Montréal, Mont-Royal, Île Saint Hélène, Downtown, and almost any park she could find. She took more than two thousand pictures, discovering an obsession with squirrels. She also learned to live on her own, even if it had been hard at the start. Having to do everything for herself, arriving home and not having anyone, it gave her a new sense of independence, one she had never had again, one that would stay with her all her life. 

Montréal became a city she always wanted to live in, both a big city and a small town, multicultural, multifaceted, the right amount of messy. Rainy, and sunny, moody. Full of secrets to discover. It was a city that made her free, it was a city that made who she was. A piece of her heart would always have the word "Montréal" written across. A part of her mind would always wander through the pebbled streets of old Montréal, making her stop and smile, remembering, making her teary eyed, making her desire of going back.