Tag: creative

  • Red and Purple Blues (Draft #2)
    7–11 minutes

    Red and Purple Blues (Draft #2)

    Dearest Miriam,

    Do you remember the first time?

    Where we sat on top on the fire escape, bathed in cold moonlight, smoking a cigarette, or you at least you watched me as I did, you took a photo on your camera that night, the photo I’ve never seen, you never showed me because

    you said it was more romantic to not see it till it were digitised, “I don’t like looking at it till I put it on my computer”

    I’d scoffed at you then. What if I looked bad in it? Did you even care?

    Our feet were hanging off the edge that night, we pushed against the railing that budged ever so slightly because if the support gave away it would not be our fault, but just fate that had been tempted, like it was our siren song and not even death could resist our temptation. We were young then, it was a summer break in the middle of high school, and we’d not eaten all day, either of us. Maybe that’s why I felt high, or it could have been the delirium from my three hours of sleep, or the nicotine in my blood, or maybe the hallucinogen that was your perfume, or maybe all four.

    I’d kissed you that night and I stayed awake the rest of it thinking about nothing but the touch of your lips on mine, looking into the stars and imagining that the billions of burning balls of gas could not hold a candle to the passion I’d felt in that moment. I’m sorry I kissed you then.

    We’d be so good together, I’d said.

     I’d treat you better, I’d said.

    Better than he ever could, I’d said.

    Then kiss me, we’d said.

    And we did.

    It’s been years since then; I’ve never seen the photo that night but now I don’t think I need to. I have the image of you peering through the viewfinder at me, seeing a more picturesque moment of myself than I ever had in my life, seared into my memory. I find myself sitting on a fire escape again, in college, graduating college, I’m alone this time. I acknowledge the cancer the cigarette between my fingers is fostering in my lungs, like a little babe being cared for by the motherly love of tar, but I find that there’s a comfort in microdosing suicide.

    It had been a long time since I saw us, you’d moved borders three times since. I hope you’d be happy to know that I found myself in someone new. You were blue and she is red. I like red, but with her I find myself bleeding purple. Y’know, I miss your blue, the depths captured in your hues, the familiarity of your embrace. It was funny, the way you grew colder as we sunk deeper inside each other; the pressure mounted and your tight hug grew from comforting to suffocating. There was a peace to it though, when we were writhed in each other’s arms. The world outside was muffled, gagged behind a cloth soaked in poppers. My lungs filled with water, like a balloon you’re not sure is close to bursting or not, but I didn’t have trouble breathing, I breathed in you.

    Sincerely,
    Ione


    Dearest Miriam,

     Do you remember when I swam in you the first time? I do. Engulfed in all of you, swimming midst the kelp which rose from so far below I couldn’t see where it started, I peered deep into that abyssal cavity, and I remember sinking. I remember when the first of the kelp wrapped itself around my leg, and then the rest snatched at me one by one until I was tethered, unable to move, not wanting to anyway and being pulled in deeper, and as I descended it only got colder, and colder. I remember screaming as the tendrils tore at my skin, gashes oozing blood, the colour blending into the navy. I remember screaming, maybe for help, maybe for you. The words floated upwards encased in bubbles, clawing its way to the surface but when it popped at the precipice, I’m not sure anyone but you were there to hear it, and I wouldn’t have had it any other way.

    I love you, I remember saying. I remember writing you poems, maybe too many because

    you’d said it scared you.

    I loved you with such fervour, and I’m sorry if you were drowning in it

    When I surfaced, when you cast me out, I sat alone cold and naked, shivering till she came along. She saved me then, and she burned hot like the sun.

                Sincerely,
                Ione


    Dearest Miriam,

    We first met at a bar. Cliché, right? Meeting someone at a bar? We danced together before we knew each other’s names. There was smoke from the fog machine engulfing the two of us, and the way she danced was mesmerising, the way the smoke weaved around her, brushed against the contours of her body. The smoke turned inside itself and back out, splaying itself bare. The smoke choked the air, it moved in ways that was more than just in pitiful three dimensions, and she moved along with it. The world itself tore around her movements, like she could fold it all and put it in her pocket. She moved like fire, alive. I allowed my fingers to trace her body too, hot to the touch, scalding almost, I let my hand linger at her waist for a moment, we danced closer together, drunk on the scent of her cherry perfume.

    I don’t remember that night all too well, actually, I’d probably had too much to drink. I remember her hands in mine, playing with each other’s fingers and looking into each other’s eyes, hers like amber, and like amber I was stuck within them, completely frozen in time. Maybe a some point, I hadn’t said a word for a minute and just stared at her with mouth agape because she’d laughed at me then, it filled me with a warmth I find difficult to describe but there was a gentleness to it, the kind that makes you want to claw your skin off, like a blanket warmed by someone else’s body heat.

    I remember this time where we were smoking together on the fire escape, or at least I was watching her smoke, and I relished it second-hand, I swear it tasted sweeter after the smoke was suffused with her breath.

    “I want a photo of you” I’d said, but neither of us had a camera,

    “I want to remember the night” I’d said, she’d breathed in more smoke, stopping just shy of the filter, I remember raising my hand to her,

     “Put it out,” and I’d been marked.

     Y’know, I recall when my body was tattered in your waters, when my gashes were oozing blood and I remember it being blue like yours. It was blue with you, a beautiful, cold sapphire, but it’s not red with her.

    Why don’t I bleed red?

    Sincerely,
                Ione


    Dearest Miriam,

    I remember this one time I was walking with her; we were in the woods. It was Autumn, the leaves told me that. The trees were vibrant orange, red and yellow, and she walked beside me. I remember saying a joke, I don’t even fully remember what it was, the only thing that stays sharp in my mind, a recording like it happened only moments ago was that she’d laughed, she’d laughed hard.

    I’d never considered myself funny till I met her. See, it’s kind of crazy; when I speak, my words buffet her, waft off her, kind of like a candle you just blew on gently, she bends and dances, and stands up straight to listen, and then quivers and talks back to me with the heat of her breath touching my skin. I love her, but being engulfed in her flames burns. It singes my skin, and I tear away from it, without even thinking. I feel the gashes on my body welding shut with her flames; it burns so bad that all I find myself craving is a cold rush of water to make it all stop.

     But she’s warm, and I like the warmth.

    That day in the woods, we took photos, both of us were smiling and standing close together, the heat of our bodies mingling in the air between us. I took significantly more photos of her. When she saw them, she’d laughed at a few, the one’s where she was caught in an awkward position which made it look like she and the tree were about to lunge at each other’s throats, my bet was on the tree. Then she

    told me to delete a couple,

    which I did protest but she was adamant,

    She didn’t like how she looked, and so I obliged her.

    She’s intoxicating when I breathe her in. I love her swimming in my lungs, it singes the inside, but I can’t stop, I don’t want to. But even still, why don’t I bleed red? I wish I could just rinse my veins of your pigment, I wish I could bleed such a vibrant vermillion that she’d know that all I have space for is her. There are times when I sit awake far too late into the night, her sleeping in bed next to me and all my thoughts are of

    How are you doing?

    I hear about you from time to time, but I’ve always wanted to hear from you. I find myself wondering what you’re up to, whether you’ve met someone new, or if you’re still looking, or if you’ve given up, or if you’re dead, I suppose. Though I hope I’d hear about that.

    I find myself wondering what you’re studying in college, or if you’re working. Or if you’re married, or if you’re engaged. Or if you opened that restaurant which I’d said I’d be first in line for on opening night.

     It scares me to know, a part of my heart seizes when I think about but nevertheless, I find myself wondering if I’d coloured your blood the way you did mine.

    Did your water wash away any trace of me? Did part of me ever dissolve into you?

    Do you still bleed blue?

    Just blue?

    Sincerely,
    Ione, who wishes she knew where to send these.

  • Kilfruit Oil
    3–5 minutes

    Kilfruit Oil

    Disclaimer: formatting breaks, flip your phone to landscape or lead on a laptop/tablet for the intended experience

    Bright.                                                                                                      Too bright.
    Warm.                                                                                                      Too Warm.
    Ah, winter comes, but not soon enough.
                                                  It’s an afternoon, just an afternoon, nothing more,                                                                                                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                nothing less.
    The flask on the burner stinks quite badly,
                                                               emitting a rather foul odour, ah,
                                                                                                          what trouble!
    Just another task on this afternoon inching it into the more,
                                                                          but I prefer otherwise, and I’d much                                                                                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                          prefer it
    in the less.
                                       Ah!                                               It’s burning!
                                                                                 No wonder it smells so foul,
                                                                                                           tsk tsk, I tsk                                                                                                      
                                                                                                               myself again,
                                  I appear to be an amateur!
                                                               60 years of alchemy and
                                                  I’m still a novice!
                                          I ought to be a bit ashamed,
    but why?
                             I don’t know really,
    but I feel like I ought to,
                             though it oughtn’t matter, I don’t think.
    Drats,                                                                                           what was I doing?
                Ah!
    Yes, mm…                                  ah, here it is!
                                      It appears I need
                                                                a dash of chronozymum,
                                                                                          hmm, yes got that,
    yes, ermm.. hmm,                             a bit of hoglily, I certainly do,
    and lastly…                           oh dear, Kilfruit oil!      Drat!

    Hot. Far too hot!
    Yes sir, far too hot to breathe,
    far too hot for crowds!
    There are so many people,
    far too many,
    by far too many stinky sweaty vagrants
    sloshing and slapping,
    intermingling, wrapping,
    coiling, themselves in each other’s fluids!
    Avert my eyes,
    look away,
    tear them away
    from the slimy and slick and stinky bodies!
    No, I won’t have it!
    Not have it all!
    Refuse!
    I’ll simply step here,
    oh and here,
    skip over that brick,
    it looks unsafe,
    though why?
    I do not know,
    I only know that I ought not,
    so I oughtn’t.
    Aha, I live!
    With fanciful footwork
    and perfected pirouettes,
    I have arrived!
    Behold all, Sourtier’s Sourtier!
    A befitting name, though why?
    Why because,
    my good friend Sourtier sourtiers all the sourtres!
    Although no, I
    cannot say certainly, no, I
    haven’t a clue what it means
    to sourtier,
    though I say, it does befit!

    Herbs. Too many herbs!
    Kilfruit oil!
    I beckon thee,
    oh, kilfruit oil!
    Where dost thou hide in this menagerie!
    Alas, good sir, in this collection of various
    sizes, shapes, colours, and
    scents, textures, tastes, and
    properties, efforts, rates,
    where might one,
    or two,
    or three,
    or four,
    find kilfruit oil?
    Mightn’t you say?!
    Say it is not so!
    …So?! No!
    No,
    no,
    no!
    Damn, it be so! Hm, where?
    Down the road?
    Left of the cookshop, right of baker?
    In front of hm?
    Ah, the watchmaker!
    Tick tock!
    Tick tock!
    Agh, that blasted--
    Tick tock!
    Tick tock!
    Stop!
    Gah, would you look at the time?!
    Each moving hand,
    more day
    becomes more, and
    less day to
    be less, which makes
    less
    more!
    Dammit, Sourtier!
    Sourtier!
    I implore you Sourtier!
    You must sourtier
    more sourtres!

    D a r k. Far too dark!
    Only more,
    more and
    more!
    No more!
    No more!
    No more,
    I say!
    Agh! To the cookshop,
    by the baker,
    ah there it is!
    It must be!
    Hello, madam! I require—
    you’re stunning, so stunning in fact,
    that I’m too stunned to speak, what can I even say?
    What is there to say? To one as beautiful as you, I do not know, may I even be allowed to grace myself in your presence? To bask under your sight?! Madam, may I ask for your hand in—
    ah… drats!
    Madam, kilfruit oil!
    Aha!
    Magical!
    Marvellous!
    Musical!
    Masterful!
    Miraculous!
    Kilfruit oil, I’ve found you now!

    C o l d. Far too c o l d!
    S h i v e r i n g,
    c h a tt e r i n g, and frozen!
    Now again,
    once more,
    I must,
    to make the more
    less,
    and make the less
    must.
    A dash of chronozymum, yes,
    a bit of hoglily too, and lastly, oh yes!
    A generous pour of kilfruit oil, now, slowly, yes,
    this time! To be sure, slowly,
    slowly!
    Easy there now! Slowly! Slowly…
    ah!
    The flask smells quite pleasant, oh yes,
    perfect!
    Perfect to be!
    Take it off heat,
    quickly,
    quickly now!
    Ah,
    now its
    cold, and the black turns
    grey turns
    purple turns
    brown turns
    yellow turns
    green turns
    blue,
    ah! What a beautiful blue,
    like the lazy sky blue of
    an afternoon,
    just an afternoon,
    nothing more,
    nothing less
    than an afternoon.
    Ah!
    It’s cool, and it smells marvellous!
    Drink,
    swig,
    chug,
    slurp!
    Slurp it up!
    All of it up!
    Blue!
    Oh, so blue!
    As more turns to less and
    less into
    must,
    an afternoon
    nothing more
    nothing less,

    turns into the afternoon,
    nothing else,
    nowhere else,
    just afternoon.

  • Future Prospects
    1–2 minutes

    Future Prospects

    The following is an poem I submitted at Purdue University for ENGL 205 Introduction to Creative Writing

    I imagine myself in a
    a quiet country home, a wooden hut surrounded by trees,
    there’s a pond nearby where multitude of fish scurry about
    under the cool embrace of the water.
    I see a myriad of chubby little rabbits hopping and
    Skipping about their brief lives.

    I imagine myself in an
    overpriced apartment in NYC, a concrete cube surrounded by more of the same.
    I walk the same route every day, a monotony I have come enjoy
    I pop into my favorite café where they already have my order prepped,
    an Americano, as black as if light were too scared to come near it.

    I imagine myself on a
    rickety ship, a seafarer of wood and nails circled by an uncaring ocean,
    thunder and rain battering down on the sails, as I clamber up to the crow’s nest
    in a desperate attempt to find land and salvation,
    to not join the corpses sleeping on the ocean’s bed.

    I imagine myself in a
    dark room, my face lit up with naught but
    a computer monitor and accompanied by rhythmic keyboard clicks.
    A silhouette hunched over; a blanket draped around their shoulders,
    picturing what could have been different.

  • A Blissful Dance
    1–2 minutes

    A Blissful Dance

    She closed her eyes and twirled, her deep ebony hair swinging with her enchanting gyration. Dress fanning out, a plain white canvas upon which the stained glass cast a myriad of colours onto. Her feet moved in and out; crossing in, extending out, hopping softly, arms raised then down then extended straight all in one fluid motion.

    She danced to an audience, the centre of a wide circle of people dressed in luxurious silks. Suits and vests, dresses that needed servants to carry the ends. They all gawked at her; why wouldn’t they? She was perfect. She smiled wide, chest swelling with pride.

    She pranced along the ballroom, the music loud in her head. The symphony of the violin leapfrogging over the piano’s melody in a battle where her ears were the reward. She began humming the tune softly to herself, moving her body in accordance under the rainbow spotlight–

    Thud.

    Static.

    Bang.

    She opened her eyes. She was on all fours. She’d fallen?

    A caved in radio sprawled out before her; a cluttered room surrounding her. She wore an oversized hoodie, splattered with innumerable stains of unknown origin. Books and pencils, papers and clothes, eyeliner and lipstick all littered throughout the room. A cacophony of colours drowned out by a dull brown light piercing through the closed curtains into her bedroom.

    She pushed off the ground, wincing as her joints ached. She began humming a tune to herself. She closed her eyes, they stung with salty tears, and she twirled on aching legs. Her dull black hair swinging with her clumsy gyration.

  • Do you wanna know how I got these scars?
    5–8 minutes

    Do you wanna know how I got these scars?

    The day started as it ordinarily would have around 9 years ago. I was up at 6 in the morning, the sunlight poured through my curtains on a sunny day at our quaint suburban home in Durban, South Africa. My sister, too deathly afraid to sleep by herself, was snoring away beside me, blissfully unaware of what her little sibling had planned that day.

    I sat up on the bed, my feet not reaching the carpeted floor of my bedroom and my mouth feeling unpleasant, somewhat dry and definitely not smelling too great, as mornings tended to do.

    I hopped off the bed, feet snuggling into the individual threads of the rug under my feet. I walked out to the corridor, trying to shirk brushing my teeth for as long as possible– parents didn’t like that very much.

    My eternally bare feet were now on the hardwood floor of the corridor leading to our living room, dining room and kitchen. My dad was already up, sitting on the counter, drinking some alien, bitter beverage that I’d never tried on account of my unwavering sweet tooth that fought any other flavours. He was reading a book, what book it was, I don’t particularly recall, but it’s safe to assume he was reading something; he’s quite the avid reader.

    I sat beside him, climbing the legs of the tall stool that skirted the black marble counter as if they were trees, and eventually, through gruelling physical strain, I placed my bum onto the cool flat wood. My father and I were always up early; he, more often than not, before the sun, and I followed soon after. It offered some quietude and, that was always welcome, I’ve never been one for loud environments, and my mother and sister weren’t very complementary to that idea.

    My father offered me breakfast, pancakes; if it was sweet, it was going to be in my mouth despite anyone’s best efforts; you can’t fight a sweet tooth, you just can’t. The morning passed as it usually did, turning on the television and watching whatever came up. It tended to be Disney XD, maybe even a morning Nickelodeon binge; it didn’t matter really, I had my pancakes, I was satisfied.

    **********

    The sun was high in the sky, my mother was off to work, and my father and sister minded their own business inside the house. I, and two neighbouring kids, both brothers and two or three years older than me at the time, stood in front of their house, scooters in hand, eyeing the asphalt hill that lined our street, an idea had been stirring in the back of our minds for the past few days, and today, it was time to execute the single most incredible stunt ever done by mankind.

    We trudged up the steep asphalt, scooters held tight in our hands. We gained altitude never reached by man on foot with each step, and when we reached the precipice, it was time.

    We placed the scooters before us, ready to shred through the space-time continuum with the speeds that we’d reach. Our heartbeats were steady. Fear? I didn’t know her; all I knew is that this hill needed to be tamed, and I’d be the one to do it alongside these two boys, no, warriors.

    When the imaginary gun fired, we were off, leaning forward for maximum aerodynamic efficiency; all three of us were speed incarnate. The wind blew through my short hair, and our scooters were steady. Nothing could stop us now. The only sounds were that of the wheels grinding against the hardened tar and the wind in our ears; we were gods, unstoppable forces of nature. We were flames eating the road alive as we blazed through the obstacle, and the wind only served to make us burn brighter.

    But how does that old adage go? Fight fire with fire? That’s the one, it would take only similar flames of equal power to dethrone me, and tragically, there were two on my flank.

    Our scooters converged, not willingly, but the universe couldn’t allow something of such pure awesomeness to thrive for long. My wheel collided with the one on the scooter beside mine. A split second was all it took to turn my blazing ball of glory into a failure rolling down an asphalt hill. I stumbled forward, my whole body uncontrolled in its descent. I don’t recall what happened to the others, but I imagine they shared mine, one of being torn from the peak of humanity and thrown into the pits of disappointment.

    I pushed off the ground, my palms scraping against the tar. My body wasn’t in pain. I was alive and ready for more. I looked up at the two boys in front of me, laughing, willing to try it again, ready to reclaim my honour. But their expressions weren’t that of renewed vigour like mine, their eyes were wide, and their mouths were agape.

    One of them pointed, “your chin”, he said, his voice shaking.

    “What?” I asked before feeling an unwelcome warmth on my hands: blood. And lots of it.

    My hands were practically painted crimson, and the ground was stained with a similar red. The smile on my face vanished, the world around me faded as I screamed, tears streaming down my face, sprinting to my house, to my father, leaving a trail of blood in my wake.

    I burst through the door, blood dripping on the floor as I made my way to my parents’ room; my dad was shaving when I shoved the door open, revealing the gaping wound on my chin. My dad’s expression was identical to the kids, just much more panicked. He took swift action, cleaning the shaving cream off his face and running out with lopsided facial hair.

    He held a tissue to my chin and phoned my mother, telling her the gist of what had happened and then grabbed my sister, telling her to keep the tissue to my chin while he drove to my mother’s office, picking her up before we went to the emergency room.

    The car ride was tense, my father kept peeking over his shoulder to make sure we were okay, and my sister simply held the tissue to my chin, completely stoic, I might add. My chin quaked, my lips always did quiver whenever I cried, and my hands were tightly holding the car seats for deal life.

    I don’t think my sister understood what was happening back then. If this happened now (and it’s embarrassingly liable to happen now), she would never have had the stomach to hold the tissue there as it slowly dyed red, the act of changing tissues is beyond her now, and to be fair, I’d prefer her not to do it. She was likely to hurt me more, accidentally, but still not an attractive option.

    Eventually, I was seated in a hospital chair. I don’t particularly remember what was happening. My mother sat beside me, looking me in my eyes and smiled as I felt string move around inside my chin along with spaced pricks as needles went in and out of my skin. Stitches, it was a new experience, and fortunately not one I’ve had to go through again– not yet anyway.

    For the next few weeks, I had little bits of thread sticking out of my chin, a premature beard as it were, and countless jokes were made at its expense, most of which involved me “looking older now” and the like.

    This may sound somewhat morbid, but I hope we all bolster scars from stupid things we did when we were younger. Life isn’t fun without a memento of stupidity forever marking your body– hence, why I want to get a tattoo someday.

Saye Kamal