by Philomena on January 21st, 2013, 3:47 am
The woman was endlessly, if somewhat distractedly compliant, following, sitting, offering her shaking hand. She was obviously agitated and nervous, and kept herself huddled into as small of a space as possible, nervous to touch anything around her. The dusky light of evening made her pallor deeper, as she spoke, "Yes… yes, sit… yes, ma'am, I…" the sentence trails off. She stares with a shivering horror at the bandage as the woman peels it off - no terror left for this mess, only horror. It is wrong.
And then…
And then…
The unconscious mind, though it communicates nothing of its perturbations to the conscious, has its strange tides and waves. When the lady touches it, its current are struck, as if by the keel of a heavy, sudden ship. //Happy…// calls the ship, drawing through the caverns, //Happy…// Happiness in this particular sea is a peculiar point to navigate towards, and vision shimmers, quivers a moment, half formed shadows passing before coagulating into a past scene unbeknownst to the memory's owner.
Minnie - for it is to early for to be Minnie Lefting even, (much less, Dr. Lefting or Professor Lefting) is prone, her skin pale and shivering, in a great chamber. The air is cold and dank with the smell of a multitude of young girls. She lays on a bed, the roughest of linen sheets on it, that scrape rough against her equally rough skin. She is, perhaps, 12 - it is difficult to tell precisely, for even then, she is stunted and small. She lays in a circle of girls, all around her, menacing in the dark light, and she is nervous. One of the girl's shakes her head slowly at the foot of Minnie's bed, as another puts down a stout wooden pole on the ground. Then, another girl leans over. Minnie drops her quilt, and balls up tight, covering her face with her hands. The leaning girl balls up a clumsily sculpted, scar-knuckled fist, and as if in slow motion, it flies, flies, flies, directly toward Minnie's belly. And just before it strikes, just in that instant, the eye of the vision is drawn close, a certain tension, unrelated to the immediate, the habitual tension of the always frightened, the always hungry, the always lonely, loosens in her face, goes slack even, replaced for just that frame in time, for just the sliver of a moment, with something almost like peace. The fist lands clumsily in the side of her belly, just above the bone of her far too sparely fleshed hip, through a rough, worn linen nightdress.
And then…
It was gone.
Minnie watched in stillness, obviously still oblivious, as the bandages paused, then continued to unwind. She cringed slightly as the healer gasped, her shoulder hunching, in a childish way, but in the way a child cringes at a flying hand, when they know what it is to be struck by it. The healer spoke, and Minnie's eyes watered slightly, her voice a little wavering. "It was at lunch, ma'am, and I tried! I tried! I should have waited, I should have waited, I couldn't. I was so frightened, I was so frightened!"
She peered up at the healer from under a frightened brow, and made a voice between a mewl, and bawl, and a whimper, "It were a fish knife, I were cutting it for lunch, and part of the fish 'ad spoilt, I shoulder been more cautious, I shoulder been more cautious! I tried ter clean it, I tried, I tried, I tried ter clean it. I tried ter clean it. I tried ter clean it! I couldney get it clean, I couldney…" As she speaks, the tears start to pile into great threatening clouds on the edge of her lower lid, and her voice, as it rattles along slowly devolves. IT began with an almost highbrow diction, almost TOO proper, perhaps, but as she speaks, as her obvious tension begins to shiver apart, it falls deeper and deeper into the low cant of the poor, of East Street - not, to the discerning listener, the can't of today, but something dated and quaint, and more a child than a woman's intonations of it.
"It is too late. It is too late! Its t'late, t'late, t'late, t'late.." she whimpers, staring at her hand with wide, horror-laden eyes.