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(I will never forgive Millais for painting Ophelia calm in the water.  My cousin Noah died shoeless and struggling under a lonely man’s hands, his eyes full of rain runoff.  Real people don’t sink as pretty as oil on canvas: Noah was four feet five on the autopsy slab, no flowers, no frames.  I am ruled by the aesthetic, but I would embrace his every imperfection if it meant having him back.  This clumsy dilettante still loves Noah with the scabs on his shins, sitting sloppy at Sam’s recitals in sneakers and shorts.  Give me the asymmetry of his eyelashes.  For the first time in my life, the art is optional.

There is a reason I keep this part peripheral: this is not about drowning.  Pendulous in the limbo of a deep lake, Noah knew nothing of footholds.  He left the rest of us grateful for something to stand on, newly appreciative of our foundations.  Don’t expect closure.  This is about hindsight.  Today, we know that we are spoiled by floors.)



i.
Emily is seeing suicide in Sam’s staff paper.  He severs his sweetest phrases between staves.  Notes dive off the margins.  When I finally confronted him about it, he let the piano lid fall like punctuation, flinging aside a stack of scores.

“I can’t believe I’m still trying to hear music,” he said.  “The things we do to cope—they’re all so wrong now.”

I had sketched the casket spray on the back of my funeral program, sharp angry leaves, the freckled faces of the stargazer lilies.  Emily danced when they released the doves.  If someone had gifted Noah with a final lungful of air, he would’ve used it all on the rock verse of Stairway to Heaven.  Where had Sam gotten the idea that expression was contextual?  He was all fury on his polished piano bench, thirteen years old and out one brother, sick because something inside him was still singing.

“Noah would want you to keep creating,” I said.  “Emily agrees.”

“Well, right now, I’m trying to create a way to get your ass out of my room,” said Sam, and it worked.  His latest concerto: A Thousand Ways to Slam the Proverbial Door.  Movement One ended with a bang.


ii.
That was last Monday, when it was still March.  Now it’s April and I’m on suicide watch in Sam’s too-quiet house, his newly knifeless kitchen, bedroom by Beethoven.  Sam’s walls have strings and hammers; he keeps piano posters plastered on his ceiling like pinups.  Yesterday he even had presence of mind to flip the page in his calendar: Lady April is an eight-octave ivory upright, seductively supported by long fluted legs. Sam stares at the photo when he can’t sleep.  He longs impotently toward her like a married man in a massage parlor, his eyes hungry and platonic.

His remorse represses him.  Sam is nothing if not faithful.


iii.
Sam and Noah were half-brothers.  They shared the second-story bathroom and their mother’s smile.  Back in January (calendar counterpart: fretted clavichord with tiny brass tangents) they sat down together and drafted the opening of the world’s worst operetta.  Sam kept his chord progressions simple so Noah could pick up the tonal slack.  Noah, singing like a huge light in a dark room, got two lines in--

                                  The poo pâtissier caters crap!
                                  Ordure hors d'oeuvres with fecal treacle--


--before his dad said, “Good shit, boys” and closed the piano lid.

Sam and Noah were foreign countries, diplomatic about their differences.  They found a thousand true moments in low-key dinners, toilet humor, sharing the good headphones during road trips.  Out of respect for his mourning, I let Sam get away with a lot of clichés.  “He didn’t know I loved him” was never one he had to use.

Emily is sixteen, like me.  She is a potpourri of our good features: Sam’s sincerity, Noah’s easy pronunciation of “apricot,” my ability to float.  After they found Noah’s body, she jetéd for hours across her apartment roof, surrounded by solar panels and the sweet smells of the building’s laundry.  I sat down to watch her.  Her silhouette was poetry, limbs unfolding in adagio like blooming roses.  She began to cry when she reached the coda.  I sketched the shape of her legs during warm-downs, pointe work, demi-plié, the way she used the broken lightening rod as a barre.

“He’s dead,” she wept again and again, over the sounds of the city.  “I can't believe Noah’s dead.”

The three of us measured those days in ink and reams.  Police reports.  The obit, the eulogies.  Sam had printed off a hundred Missing Child flyers and thrown them from the roof, and Noah’s face speckled the streets for weeks, silently underfoot like bad subliminal advertising.  When I am lonely, that’s how I remember my cousins: a dead singing voice, a musician with Missing Person posters, a shadow dancing between the drainpipes.

I only draw.  I only write terrible poetry.  But for that brief period of suspension, I was not alone in my limitations.  With Noah’s name in the newsletters, Sam and Emily knew how it felt to be held hostage by paper.


iv.
“Are you still going to be alive when I wake up?”

Two weeks until May (close-up of baby grand bowels, solid spruce soundboard; I peeked ahead).  Sam still has these nights where he craves too many sleeping pills.  I ask him trenchant questions whenever I have to slip into the bed beside him.  If I can guilt him out of murdering himself, I will.

“Will you kill me if I’m not?” he says.  He sets his glass of water down on the untouched staff paper I keep printing out for him, watches the dark lines bleed into a ring.  “Em suggested I pick out some new hobbies.  Right now it’s a toss-up between football and skateboarding.  What do you think?”

“Seriously, shut up.”  He’s only trying out these identities to test me.  He might as well have suggested hooking.  Our family maps itself across an archipelago of artistic mediums; it’s nothing to us if you can’t sing it, sculpt it, spell it in a swing of the hip.  Sam’s got the wrong feet for boarding or backfield.  His toes were built to press pedals and keep track of time.  “Give it a while longer, Sam.  You’re still afraid of hearing him in your music.”

“If I wait too long, I’ll lose it,” says Sam.  “I’m going to forget it all.”

He doesn’t mean Noah.  Noah reverberates endlessly between us, emotional echo chambers that we are, and we are learning again how to take tiny steps forward.  Emily can do fouettés forever now.  I can draw a whole face in one blind line.  Only Sam remains lost between clefs; the three notes he’s written today sound lonely and deficient, like they’re still waiting for someone’s answer.

“I miss him,” he says.

“I miss him, too.”  I do.

He closes his eyes, and I watch him until his breathing becomes steady.  I wish I could convince him that he will be okay.  After all, I’ve seen how he sleeps.  Flushed with the memory of Noah’s murder, Sam still prays Beethoven across my stomach with restless fingers, his dreams stained by Steinways.
©2009 ~NoraVoss
:iconnoravoss:

Author's Comments

Ophelia, by Sir John Everett Millais: [link]

Artists are always mourning over something, aren't they? Surrendering yourself to the whole aesthetic philosophy is like wearing a big "BEAT UP MY EMOTIONS" sign, but things sure are pretty between the punches.

It's been a long time since I've tried to write original fiction, and it shows. I'd kill for some concrit. Thanks for reading.

EDIT, 10/02/09: Yesterday, I almost logged out when I saw my message center because I thought I’d accidentally hacked someone else’s account. Getting a DD (the online honor, not the bra size) has always been a dream of mine—I promise I will work harder to deserve it! Thank you so much to =bekkia and ^LadyLincoln for featuring me, and to everyone who has taken the time to favorite this or leave me a comment. You are all amazing!

Daily Deviation

Given 2009-10-01

Delivering quite a powerful message just with his remarkable writing skills, ~NoraVoss's leitmotif has a flare for delivering with her great use of devices. Just the opening lines alone are enough to pull you immediately in. (Suggested by =bekkia and Featured by ^LadyLincoln)

Comments


love 2 2 joy 0 0 wow 1 1 mad 0 0 sad 0 0 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0
:iconpuds:
Oh man, did you ever know that you're my hero? You TOTALLY used, what, I dunno, four pages to COMPLETELY spell out this huge situation and all these personailities better than most people could do in a novel, with like, all these perfect little clashes of the art and the real--like in the middle of it all there's the good headphones thing, stuff like that--and some of it does pass over my head, because I'm just not that smart, but even the stuff that I don't get adds to it all.

Wow I'm terrible at this. I'm not intellectual enough to explain myself the way I want to.

I would KILL to have your ability to send the message like you do, making little mundane things pretty and meaningful, like the calander--and...eurgh. I don't even know. I'm sorry. You're AMAZING and I totally am your creepy drooling fangirl.

--
DO YOU WANNA BE A MASTER OF...

DO YOU HAVE THE SKILLS TO BE...
:icongunblademassacre:
Wow. Your writing is so powerful. ;_; You captured so many things so well that I can't come up with a way to adequately praise you, much less critique you.

I've gotta say, though, your voice made me incredible amounts of happy. It was a serious treat hearing the English language being put to such good use. :heart:

--
    =CleonCrusade, for great CLC justice.

Leon had been taken hostage by Insane Left Testicle, a supervillain who had the city in a state of amazing terror. Cloud fainted dead away, like a small child being stapled to the wall.
:iconcinvxten:
I have read novels that do not impact me as much as this has. I swear to God, anything your write turns to gold, it's maddening! What did you do it become this way? Practice? God damn!

Regardless, the way you weave metaphors and analogies into your work is flawless; it's literally like a tapestry, each strand perfect in itself - the design as a whole... majestic. It's poetry. Beautiful, beautiful poetry. My God, how I envy you. How I am even more motivated to strive to become like you.

It's ironic - I'm currently in a dorm room on a laptop at a Creative Writing Workshop. I haven't seen/done anything that compares to this or anything that you've done, not even the professors. You have a gift. A true gift. My mind is melting just thinking about it.

The praises don't end. They never will. But, unfortunately, I have to cap it here for right now. If you want, I could go on endlessly about how much I love your work. But only if you wanted, heheh.

--
To Do List:
1. Wake up
2. Survive
3. Go back to bed
:iconliar-kun:
ah, there's nothing wrong with this peice at all! It's beautiful in its entirety, tugs at your own losses and makes them fresher and sumsuch things. powerful pathos and the like.

It's a great story, and even if you say you haven't written original fiction in a long time, nothing gives that away.

--
Don't. No. Mad. Stop.
:iconnoravoss:
Puds, I am so sorry for the late response! You have no idea how much I enjoy your comments. You are far too nice to me, and I always freak out when I hear from you.

Thank you so much for the kind words! I’m all about the flowery prose right now, which is no good, because I’m definitely not disciplined enough to carry my writing to full novel length. If anything passes over your head, it’s not for lack of your intelligence—you’re brilliant. I’m just too obscure. I will do my best to fix that.

This creepy drooling fangirl thing is totally mutual, baby. Thank you again for being so damn awesome—I can’t tell you how grateful I am.
:iconnoravoss:
Sorry for the late response, and thank you very much for following me here and taking the time to drop me such a nice comment! Language is tricky for me, and I always feel like I'm trying way too hard, so you said exactly the right thing to comfort me. I really appreciate it.
:iconnoravoss:
Sorry for the late response--thank you for your comment!
:iconnoravoss:
Cinvxten, it's so good to hear from you! Can you forgive me for being the world's shittiest correspondent? I seriously have four pages of an e-mail that I still haven't finished for you, and you're still here, saying incredibly nice things to me? I'm sorry. I suck so, so hard.

I'm not someone you should look to as any authority on any topic, seriously. Your own writing strengths will carry you so far--I hope you realize that! You do, don't you? The single piece of (trite, obvious, crappy) advice I have for you is this: do what you can to find beauty in everything, because the world is a very different place when you're looking for poetry. I know, that's embarrassingly basic...but it helps me whenever I'm stuck on something. There's just so much to everything. And I think most of it is good.

Hey, are you still at the workshop? How was it? I wanted to go to one this summer, but I forgot.

Again, thank you a thousand times over for being so consistently supportive, even though I'm a complete flake and have done nothing to deserve it. You have no idea how happy you make me. NO IDEA.
:iconnoravoss:
Wow, what a beautiful comment! You are being far too kind, but I really appreciate it--thanks so much for making me feel better both about this piece and its genre. Sorry for my late reply; it wasn't for lack of gratitude, promise.

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