Forever Twilight by Patrick Sean Lee (smallest ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Patrick Sean Lee
Book online «Forever Twilight by Patrick Sean Lee (smallest ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Patrick Sean Lee
âI suppose it wouldnât hurt to ask him,â Charles sighed. âCan you go find him, Lashawna?â
âIâll go,â Jude said, grabbing hold of Lashawnaâs hand as she abandoned what was left of her dinner and rose.
âMe too!â said Sammie.
We all left the table to go in search of the quiet one.
That evening we found him in front of the tower, his head bent forward, his hands folded in his lap. He wasnât moving a muscle. We assumed he was deep in thought.
âWell, it doesnât look like heâs praying tonight,â Cynthia whispered. She, Charles, Munster and I had quietly gone out onto the front porch. We stood watching him for a minute or two, until Charles finally spoke in a loud enough voice for him to hear.
âJerrick, we have a question for you.â
Jerrick seemed not to have heard. He remained sitting, motionless.
âJerrick?â Charles said again, a little louder this time.
âWhatdâya âspose heâs up to?â Munster asked Cynthia.
âWho knows. Hey Jerrick!â
Denise and Sammie joined us a second later. They stopped beside us with question marks on their faces. Jerrick finally woke from his reverie and turned, smiling over at us.
âHello. Glad to see you could make it. I apologize. I didnât mean to abandon you again,â he said.
âSammie, I didnât realize you were so pretty.â He stopped there. The impact of his remark to Sammie hit each of us like a hammer to the head. There could be no other interpretation of the statement other than somehow, some way, heâd actuallyâŠseen the young girl! I couldnât move from the shock of it. Astounded, jaws slack, each of us shot dumbfounded glances at one another as Jerrick rose to his feet. He began to walk in our direction, as assuredly as if heâd navigated the distance from the tower to the porch steps a thousand times.
Lashawna and Jude at last came running out, unaware at first at what was going on. They halted at the left of us by the porch rail.
âWhatâs up?â Lashawna asked.
âHi sis.â Everything went dead silent for several seconds.
It finally hit her. âOh JesusâŠJerrick?â She raced down the steps, leaving her lover stranded and absolutely confused.
Reactions. My knees merely shook. Felt rubbery. Charles stammered, as did Cynthia. Munster raised his hands over his head and waved them wildly. Jerrickâs face turned toward him.
Lashawna hit him with a hug that sent him reeling backward, but I could plainly see that heâd expected her jarring arrival. Heâd moved one foot backward preparing for her joyous assault, and raised his arms outward.
âYou can see? You can SEE? How? How did it happen?â She released her bear hug on him and brought her hands to his cheeks, rubbing her fingers over them, and then gently onto his eyes. Eyes that no longer opened to darkness.
âItâs hard to explain. Iâve been thinking of Mari for weeksâwhat happened to her when she touched the towerâŠâ
All of us gathered around them, anxiously waiting for his explanation of the miracle that had transpired.
ââŠI knew I couldnât, mustnât touch it, but the fact is, they placed this thing here for our benefit. IâŠI just started talking at it a week ago.â
âAt it?â
Jerrick glanced at Cynthia. Such a strange sight to behold, the shifting of his dark brown eyes suddenly filled with life.
âYes. I mean, it wouldnât talk back.â He chuckled. âSomething like talking to God. Does he ever say anything when you pray?â
âNo, because he doesnât exist. But they do,â she answered.
Jerrick shrugged. Lashawna stared up at him, and then after a brief moment took hold of his arm and urged him to follow her. âCome inside, Jerrick. You look so tired! Letâs sit in the living room. Tell us everything that happened!â
Denise rushed forward and took his free arm. Amidst a gaggle of astonished voices, we walked back toward the steps and the house beyond. I think Lashawna remained a little unconvinced, still in shock, and rightly so. As we approached the porch she stammered, âStep, Jerrick. Be careâŠoh, oh, I meantâŠOhmagodâŠâ
Habit ingrained subconsciously over the years? You rearrange the bedroom, and then wake up the next morning and bang into the wall in the darkness.
Beam Me Up, CaptainâSo-what-happened!â
Jerrick had seated himself in the center of the sofa, running his long fingers over the material. Looking at it. As we gathered around him on the floor, and across the coffee table on the twin sofa, he shot his eyes around the room; the lifeless fireplace across the way, the end tables and lamps and curtained windows. At each of us, a smile the size of California on his face. Whatever transformation had occurred, it had to have taken place this evening. This morning, even at the beginning of dinner, his gaze was placid, non-existent. Locked unsurprisingly, or unnoticeably, away.
How many times had he seen his sister, or Cynthia, or CharlesâŠor me, with fingers as sensitive in their touch as an eagleâs eyes were to vision, gliding majestically a thousand feet above a rocky, valley floor? But tonight his gaze was penetrating each time it hesitated on one of us. It was as though the sudden opening of the door of sight animated his smile, at long last making his handsome face a colorful and completed portrait.
For the first time since Iâd met him, I wanted to close my eyes tightly for an hour or a day. Walk to the kitchen. Out the rear door and the step beyond. To the barn and outbuildings. Back to the house. Up the stairs to the second floor. I wanted to see if I could even do it without tripping over something, even having taken those steps without a thought a hundred times. I wanted to focus my hearing to a much higher intensity; my touch to match in some inadequate way, his. To experience the world heâd lived in for so long. To see in the mysterious way he had. But had I tried, my memory would have interfered. With each step, my mind would have seen images with form and color, unlike his.
âTheyâre here with us constantly, even if we are unaware of their presence,â Jerrick began. That was a distressing and frightening thought.
âI sensed it the moment the tower appearedâŠtheir presence. Not inside it exactly, but there nonetheless. Oh, itâs difficult to put into words. Liken it to closed circuit TV or the unseen eye in the old Smart TVs. Something like those things, but in a much stranger, moreâŠalien personal way.â
âYou touched it?â Cynthia asked.
âNo. Remember they said no to. Mari didnât listen, but I did.â
âWell then, what?â
Jerrick shifted his eyes to Cynthia. âThey were there at every moment while Mari lay in the coma. They heard and saw everything, Iâm certain.â
âBut you donât actually know that for a fact?â
âWhat about you?â Charles interjected. âWhat did they do to you, and how did they do it. Or perhaps more importantly, why?â
âYeah, yaâ sat in front of that thing for weeks. What were yaâ talkinâ about all that time?â Munster said.
âI donât understand,â Denise said.
âWhy canât any of the rest of usâŠâ
âQuiet. Slow down. Let Jerrick speak,â Charles said raising his hands. Impetuous Munster couldnât help himself.
âWhereâs Mari? Is she alive?â
âShhâŠlater. Go on, Jerrick.â
âI sensed it. I sat beneath the tower and asked them. âWhy canât we touch your gift?â No answer. âWhy are you here, and why did you destroy our civilization?â Again, no answer. âWhy wonât you communicate with me?â âThey can see you. I canât, but I know youâre listening. Talk to me! Explain all of this!â
âThey remained silent, but I remained adamant in my quest to find answers.â
âWell, what did they finally say?â Lashawna asked her brother.
âNot a word. Not a thought transferred across the space dividing us. Nothing. But four nights ago I began to feel something happening. My head beginning to pound. Like that, yes. Not a painful pounding, more like cells and nerves flashing storm-like all of the sudden.
âAnd then it would stop. Iâd rise and leave them, finally. Last night. I began to experience something new. Shadows. Light and darkness. I guessed thatâs what they were. Iâd only known the words before. How would I have known what they really were? TonightâŠan entire world erupted in front of me!â
âButâŠbut why? To what end did they do this?â Charles pushed onward with the most important question in all of our minds.
Jerrick remained silent for what seemed the longest time, looking down. At last he rose and walked to the fireplace. He ran his fingers over the edge of the mantle as we all looked at him, and then he turned.
âTonight they spoke, moments before you came out.â He paused, gazing across the space dividing us. At each of us in turn. At last his eyes came to rest on his sister. He smiled at her almost sadly.
âThey told me that I must leave. Tonight.â
âWHAT?â
âWhy?â
âI am to take nothing other than what Iâm wearing. Just go.â
âOh, this is insane!â
âGo where?â Charles asked.
âI am to find Mari. They sent her away you know. You have to understand that she had little to say about it. But sheâs safe. They also told me she was âdifferentâ now. I am to join her.â
âWhere? Where did they say she was?â
âThey didnât.â
Our jaws dropped. Lashawna was shaking her head, and I could see tears beginning to form at the corners of her eyes. Jude, who knew little about Mari, who hadnât lived with us through the months, who had dealt with her own altogether different dramas, gently raised her arms and placed them around her sobbing mateâs shoulders. Lashawna pushed her away, shot to her feet, and ran to her brother.
âI wonât let you go! Theyâre evil! They massacred millions and millions, and now theyâre taking us one by one andâŠandâŠI wonât let them take you!â
I grabbed hold of Peterâs hand, wondering at her statement. Something told me Mari was alive, butâŠwhat form or state of mind was she in? And after they ripped Jerrick from us, who would be next, if their intent actually was to tear us apart? Peter remained staring across the room at Lashawna and Jerrick, but lowered his head and softly kissed me. How could I not notice that Deniseâs face was dressed in horror at Jerrickâs words? She reached across Charlesâ lap, grabbed hold of his hands and squeezed them vice-like.
âI ainât thinkinâ they mean us harm,â Munster shot. âIf they did, they couldaâ killed us a long time ago. Theyâre up to somethinâ else. What is it, Jerrick? Spit it out.â
His arms enfolding his diminutive little sister in a comforting embrace, Jerrick looked upward to the ceiling, and after a second or two, closed his newly awakened eyes.
We waited.
Jerrick opened them at last, looked down at his sister, and then released himself from her slowly. He spoke to her as
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