As the Life of a Tree

“I know we’re over,” she said, her head hanging limp like a dying flower.

Thirteen did not even have tears to cry.  Her head felt full and fiery, like some great flame had taken over her soul and burned her up like one of those hollow trees that became chimneys in the recent forest fires of the drought-ridden eastern mountain range.  Those trees had long-since been dead, hollowed-out by animals and bugs, leaving but a shell of a former life.  Who knows what originally killed those trees, whether droughts or some terrible pest or disease; but the flames that surged up and out of cracks and holes in the surface were certainly not culprit.

Had she the awareness of herself, in this moment, to see herself instead of feeling everything so deeply, she would have understood why she only felt the stinging pain of this latest fight.  She would have remembered the ages-old insidious thoughts and notions accepted that scraped and clawed at her, that hollowed her out; Thirteen had lovingly and ignorantly volunteered long ago to be emptied out and made a shell of herself in search of freedom and eternal love.  

For now, she only felt that emptiness filled with the heat of his and her intermingled, passionate anger, countless infractions piled upon one another until one or the other of them lit this… … or was it that they lit this fire together, their last act of unity?

Her mind stung in this sudden awareness: it was a joint-effort insurgence against each other that started this last feud.

She wanted to cry, to beg his forgiveness, to scream out in pain and terror at her realization; but she knew it would not make a difference; it would be like trying to spill a bucket’s worth of water on this very forest-like fire.

Thirteen shuddered and drank the knowledge herself, quenching that stream of fire within her.

Her eyes lifted to look upon him again.

He was as beautiful as she had ever found him to be, even in his rage.  Perhaps he was beautiful particularly because of his rage:  that raw emotion engulfed him differently than  her, flooded him and spilled from his every pore; and he only looked more like himself, very naturally. 

At least he is feeling deeply, she thought, gently; at least he is aware, fully.

It was only now that her eyes filled with tears, as if the flood of his emotion had finally reached her and was lapping at her most present orifice.

As she watched him, she felt herself flood with a love that felt heavy — as heavy as water, as heavy as a river streaming through her, and just as fluid.  Her head felt dizzy; she felt like she was rocking, swaying….

A question bobbed into her mind like a bottle drifting upon the waves of the ocean:  What am I to do?

The answer lifted into her mind through the flood of emotion as a bubble of air lifts through the water and bursts at the surface.  Thirteen understood suddenly that she had not been paying any attention to herself and the emptiness she had housed for so many years.  It was easy to be filled up by him:  by his emotions, needs, desires; by his beauty; by all of her responses, wishes and dreams related to him.  It was easy for her to feel so much for him when she had felt so very empty for so long; it was easy for her to be a home for others before and for him precisely because she was as empty as a hollowed tree that becomes home to squirrels, birds, insects, bees, foxes, snakes….

Of course they would make of her what they willed.  Of course they would be frustrated if she didn’t respond as they wished she would.  Of course they would go away.

It wasn’t his fault, nor any other’s, that she was hollow; but, what if she let herself be broken, finally, by this wave of passion, by this flood of emotion?  What if she let herself be destroyed entirely, ultimately, to become part of the earth again, part of everything she knew and loved, part of things she never knew?  What if she finally died to all she ever was and became something entirely new?

Her eyes cleared, and she felt something strange and indistinct in her mind.

She walked to him, bent slightly as she lifted his hand to her lips and kissed his knuckles meaningfully.  He watched, silently, with disturbed curiosity.

She raised to her full height once again and whispered, the sound barely a breath, the last that her heart knew.

Then Thirteen turned and walked away.

Photo ©2017 MLM

The One That Never Happened

He was one of Twenty-Six’s childhood friends.

He was beautiful, too – not in the same seductive way, but rather, in a way that made her stare, enamored, attempting for hours to comprehend him, his ways, his beauty… his pain.  And, moreover, his way through pain

She felt it like a strong punch in her gut, but one that did not hurt even if it took her breath away.  It happened every time she looked at him, every time the huge orbs of his eyes found hers.  It was like waking up suddenly, like looking through some chasm punched through the universe into an alternate reality.

She was sure she loved Nineteen; and she was equally sure he did not love her… except, perhaps, in that genuinely-good and gentle way he loved all people.  Except that, sometimes… maybe… she saw some glint in his eyes, felt his hugs linger longer than a friend’s should….

All she knew was that she loved him – every time she saw him, every time she thought of him, every time she saw his work, every time she went near his shop.  She loved him, and she would happily accept nothing more than a pleasant friendship just to be able to spend some amount of time with him, just to see him interact with others, just to perhaps be there for him in some time of need.

She used to have fantasies of being with him, fantasies she burned like paper in her mind, with nothing more passionate surviving than the momentary glint of a heartfelt wish as the thought drifted up and away on the currents of her mind.  Nothing but fragile, black carbon would remain of her secret desires.

Still, she loved him.

It had been years since she had met Twenty-Six, passionate years filled with tumultuous interactions that occasionally filled her with so much love she spilled again and again like a river onto a broad delta; passionate years filled more often with so much pain that it felt like the earth itself had been sucked dry of every drop of rain.

She hadn’t known they were friends, when she met Nineteen.  When she learned, she held it secret from both men, not wishing to be the bridge between them; not wishing to have either as the bridge between them all.  She loved them both for different reasons… and, for different reasons and at different times, her love for one seemed more sane, more possible, less difficult even in times of difficulty than her love for the other.

Who cared, anyway, whom she loved?  Would either of them change his way towards her – except to try to protect her, to protect the other from his potential interest in her, leaving her bereft and even more alone than she was now, caught somewhere in-between?  At least this way, in her silence, she could preserve her love for them both, could swing, unnoticed and unspoken, from one to the other as her own heart dictated its present need.

She wondered, too, if they would understand; if anyone would understand.  She didn’t know why, but she loved broken men… perhaps – she realized when she considered Nineteen – it was because she loved superheroes.  She loved the broken man turned whole again as she was a broken woman become whole again in a new way, like an intricately-beautiful mosaic made of pieces of shattered pottery.

Nineteen had something of that, far more than Twenty-Six had.  Nineteen did not give up; he kept making beauty, kept finding beauty, kept being beautiful and reflecting the beauty of his friends, family, acquaintances, and of all the earth in his art.  Kept risking everything.

To Thirteen, this was the most exquisite thing on the earth:  Nineteen was like a mosaic made of broken mirrors that only became more interesting, more fantastical with every new shard.

And, though Thirteen knew she saw this in him, she wondered, always, if Nineteen saw anything of the same in her quiet, shy attempt at polished presence.

Twenty-Six, however, was like an ancient Japanese bowl, broken and mended with gold… except that Twenty-Six never wanted his gold seen; he was too ashamed of having broken at all.  Yet, Thirteen loved him for all that he was and boggled at his need for self-deceit….

Perhaps you do not yet know, but it is impossible to love someone who does not love himself.  Or herself.  It is impossible because they will reject every overture of true love; every gesture will be a great pain reminding them of all the things they’ve done (or thought they’ve done) for which they deserve punishment, not love.  They will, at the greatest points of receiving love that they deem undeserved, respond with such fierce cruelty towards the one who loves them as to make themselves all the more undeserving, mounting cruelty upon cruelty, present upon past, the new love paying the price for everyone’s sins.

This, Thirteen bore for years with Twenty-Six, as with plenty of men before him.  If only she loved enough, she believed, they would love her back; they would wake from their nightmares and find her there, loving; and they would be grateful, would love her in return.  Even just a little bit.

But it never happened.

This was what Thirteen was coming to see in her life when she first encountered Nineteen.

She was single, pushed away by yet another conflict with Twenty-Six.  And so, for so many reasons, she found herself careful when expressing herself to Nineteen, cautious like a feral kitten who wants nothing more than to love and be loved, who wants nothing more than a good scratch behind the ears that would inevitably and very quickly melt her into a puddle of purrs and forever-loyal adoration, despite her wild upbringing.

She was certain she gave away everything she felt when her eyes found his, every time.  She was sure her eyes melted into great, blue pools as soon as Nineteen spoke to her, was sure he saw her offer her vulnerability up as a gift every time, which he took gently and never abused, always handed back after a warm exchange of words, and she felt herself touched with a glint of gold.

She went to see him this time to say goodbye.

She suffered with the knowledge that she was leaving, suffered because she loved him, suffered because she wanted to tell him everything, this time; to tell him that she loved him even if he didn’t love her in return; to tell him that no matter where she was on the planet, she would watch for him and his successes on social media, would be within reach, would always admire and love him for his gentle, honest ways and for his eternal positivity.

She wanted so much to reach out, sometimes, to just kiss him simply, to express her heart wordlessly.  But nobody does that.  Certainly, girls don’t do that.

She walked into his store, glanced around when she found no one near the entrance.  ‘Well, why not?’ she asked herself silently.

“Nineteen?” she called into the other room.

He peeked his head around the corner, saw her and smiled warmly.  “Hi!  Thirteen, how are you?”

Thirteen beamed, as she always did when she received one of his precious smiles, given readily to all who entered his domain.  “Hi!  I’m good; how are you?”  And she walked over to him, then found herself embraced, as he always did with her, as he did with all of his friends who came to visit or to buy something.  Thirteen returned the embrace affectionately, squeezed herself tightly to him, breathed in his scent; then deliberately released Nineteen’s tall, muscular body.

His eyes flashed merrily and he grinned, “Thanks, I’m great.  Working on a new project and it’s going really well.  What’s new with you?”

Thirteen glanced at the ground near his feet and frowned momentarily.  “I’m going to France for a bit.  Traveling; I can’t pass it up.”  She looked up into his wide, questioning eyes.  “I wanted to say goodbye.”

Nineteen watched her with gentle curiosity, his eyes concerned but his voice reassuring.  “Well, that sounds great!  So, what’s wrong about it?”

I’ll miss you, she almost blurted.  It’s stupid, but I’m in love with you.

She held her words, gazed at him silently as truths swam thick and quickly through her mind like a school of fish.  She chose the easiest one. 

“I’ll miss you,” she confessed.

Nineteen’s concerned look softened and he rested a hand reassuringly on her arm, “Oh, but you’ll be back.  You’re sweet… and you’ll share everything, I’m sure.  It’ll be beautiful.  Where are you going?”

Thirteen managed to rattle off her anticipated travel plans while scolding herself severely for not being fully open with him.  Just tell him the truth! she chided herself.

“…Nineteen…” she said, finally, looking into his eyes.  “I’m in love with you.”

She paused, awaiting a reaction, awaiting something that would give her a clue as to her next confession.  He was surprised, but only faintly; there was something of fear in his demeanor, and yet, he stood unmoving, generally accepting her words and their gravity with incredible patience.

“I’ve been in love with you for a while; you must know it.  I can’t help it; and I wouldn’t want to help it if I could: you’re too handsome, too sweet, too gentle, too….”

Thirteen’s words trailed off as she watched his eyes change, softening somewhat, yet tainted now with some deep and unfamiliar intensity.

Thirteen inhaled sharply and felt her breath stop short, her body reading the look in Nineteen’s eyes fractions of seconds before her mind coagulated a conscious meaning.  She felt a flood rush to her head, and his hands raised to her hair, gently pulled her close, and he kissed her.

It felt to her like all time stopped, that she moved in rhythm, in response without conscious volition, and like no conscious acquiescence was needed.  She kissed him with the relaxed openness of floating in a still, warm pool under a bright sun; he kissed her with such measured intensity that every subsequent word became unnecessary as, spilling from his mouth to hers, he responded and explained all of the unspoken depths they had held, for years, having kept a friendly distance between them.

It was a conversation that would have taken days, had words been used.  It was a conversation in which he acknowledged everything she had said and felt and meant in those few brave sentences that she pulled from her chest and gave to him.  He kissed her, and in that kiss, kept everything outside of them away, kept every possible distraction far beyond the realm of interruption, this moment too important to stop and start again.

And, when he stopped kissing her, some minutes later, Nineteen looked taller, stronger; and Thirteen glowed with revived peace.

His eyes were clear, certain, when he looked down at her sparkling blue-grey eyes.  His arms rested easily on her shoulders; his long fingers remained entangled in her hair.

“Don’t go,” he uttered, and the words sounded like a breath, like a whisper, like those quiet urgings spoken in one’s mind that we so often don’t listen to; that never punish us for not listening.

Thirteen’s eyes fluttered; her mouth twitched in stunned half-protest.  Her full lips parted to speak, and he cut her response short.

“Don’t go.  Stay here with me; you can move in upstairs.  I’ll give you your own space if you want it, or you can sleep with me; whatever you like.  You can come travel with me; I have several trips planned this year.  They’re not in Europe, but… if you want to….”

What started as confidence grown of a true connection faltered only enough to give Thirteen the respectful choice of her independence.

“…If you want to, I would love to have you with me.”

Nineteen’s gaze shifted from a respectful request, from a plea, to a gentle sales pitch.  His eyes twinkled as he spoke:

“I’ll teach you all I know.  You can write, take photographs; we’ll explore the towns…. It will be nice to have someone travel with me.”

Thirteen listened, thunderstruck.  Her eyes watched Nineteen’s glinting, merry brown eyes as he spoke; her heart pounded, demanding the obvious answer, threatening to jump out of her chest if she did not speak the answer verbally.

“Are… are you serious?”  It wasn’t that she didn’t believe him; it was that she no longer trusted reality.

“Yes.”  Nineteen smiled gently at her and shifted his hands to hold her jawline in his large palms.  “Yes, I’m serious.  Will you stay?  Say you’ll say yes.”

Her breath stole the reply before she could think:  “Yes.  Yes…”

Thirteen blinked like she was waking up from a long and traumatic dream, terrible only because everything had been just slightly wrong; and this… this was reality.

“Yes, yes; yes, I’ll come with you.  Yes, I’ll stay with you.  Yes, oh my god, yes.”

Photo ©2012 MLM

Crosswinds

Somehow, he had managed to have them upgraded to first-class seats.

Somehow, she thought, when he doesn’t even have air miles or priority status.

He was just charming, that way.

They boarded and found wide, comfortable seats next to each other. She loved flying first-class: she loved the free alcoholic beverages (even though she didn’t drink that much) and the cute snack baskets in which flight attendants carry so many unnecessary goodies (even if they were things she’d never eat at home); it felt like when she was a child on road trips with her parents. Her mom would always pack coolers full of soda and water bottles, would pack bags full of their favorite munchies so the kids wouldn’t be anxious or obnoxious on the trip and Dad wouldn’t have to stop “every ten minutes” to satisfy one child’s or another’s hunger pangs.

They hand out blankets, in first class, when you’re cold and pillows if you need them; and they are always unfailingly nice.

He leaned over and buried his nose in her hair; lingered. She smirked, turned her head just slightly towards him.

“Hmm… comfortable?” she asked.

He smirked, his grin only visible from the shift in his cheekbones that she could make out peripherally. “Mmmmm…” he hummed happily. He parted her hair with his sharp nose and pressed his warm lips against her neck.

She shuddered, let out a soft gasp and tilted her head oppositely to give him access; his teeth sank impressionably into her skin.

Thirteen lived her life with a strong awareness of the world around her; but, when she was with Twenty-Six, it was challenging to maintain even in the best of times. …Well… let’s make that: ‘even when he wasn’t touching her skin.’ But her habitual love of observation, of learning all she could about the world around her always kicked in, demanding she become aware, considerate of others despite the inconvenience it sometimes posed to various parts of her life.

Twenty-Six knew this about her, and it was one of the things he enjoyed most. He knew of her duality of purpose: both to learn about and to love the world for what it is, while breaking every rule that bound her to those traditions and ways of thinking she considered antiquated or obsolete. He knew, also, that it implied Thirteen would only inconvenience others or disturb their comfort as a result of her behaviors if she considered her pleasure, behavior and priorities to be – very innocently – more important than theirs… particularly when she assessed they might learn something from her daring nature.

So, Twenty-Six took pleasure in testing Thirteen’s boundaries, even if it meant he irked her sometimes. He loved playing games, and she was – quite literally – his favorite playmate.

Twenty-Six shifted his teeth meaningfully, pressing his sharp incisors just a fraction deeper into her throat. Thirteen’s low moan and the throbbing pulse beneath his lips indicated that Twenty-Six was winning the attention he prized; he paused and lightly licked the warm skin caught between his teeth.

She shuddered again and closed her eyes, goosebumps raising all over her skin.

Suddenly, Thirteen jerked the rest of her body to attention, her eyes open slightly, and glanced around the plane like a doe watching for predators. Her head and neck did not otherwise move.

So far, it seemed they were unsettling no one. The businessmen across the aisle were caught up with their martinis and cell phones; she could see no one else who might have noticed.

Thirteen lifted her hand and stroked Twenty-Six’s cheek, hidden under her waves of hair; then gently herself pulled herself away.

Twenty-Six did not move, but watched her with wide, child-like eyes. He murmured, his voice low and facile, “What? You didn’t like it?” The twinkle in his eyes and smirk forming at the corners of his mouth could not be repressed.

Thirteen’s lashes lowered shyly, acknowledging that her handsome companion had achieved his ends. She leaned over to his earlobe and, her hot breath falling upon his skin, confirmed:  “…You’re driving me crazy. You know you are….”

One side of Twenty-Six’s mouth lifted to a victorious half-smile.  He had wanted to push her more, had learned her limits, knew when was best to push them… and this was Thirteen’s way of saying she wanted everything he would deliver (and possibly more than he had yet contrived), and that she trusted him enough to break every foul rule in every book, was ready and willing to walk together, unabashedly, straight into Heaven or Hell or jail or whatever-might-result from doing so…

But that could wait.

Twenty-Six had been with plenty of women over the years, and none was quite like Thirteen. There were women more ravenously eager, more carnally-driven, but he had long ago lost interest in them. They were, to him, the soul-equivalent of vultures and hyenas:  They had a job to do and they did it exceptionally well; no one could fault or criticize them for any of what they were. They were even – and often! – quite physically beautiful, kind, sweet ladies; but he found their motivations shallow. There were no hidden parts to women like that; there were no discoveries, no surprises.

There were women, too, more naively innocent than Thirteen… but they just made Twenty-Six feel dirty, evil, cruel when he toyed with them. Which, he remembered well, he had.

He played with women for years on end, until he met Thirteen. He was even expecting to play with her, when they met… until he quickly found he couldn’t. The longer he gazed into her immortal eyes, the longer he spent looking at any part of her, the more he felt connected to her… and the more he saw of her. She was so open, so guileless… so vast. It was like she started, at first glance, as a mere female, then took shape as a sensual and beautiful woman, and then just kept expanding infinitely… while, somehow, she managed to keep her multitudinous universes spiraling, growing inside her very feminine figure. He didn’t quite get lost, but sometimes… wouldn’t it be fun to? Because, god, she was beautiful…!

He had confessed to her the game he played with other women, when they met. He confessed his reasons for playing: that he was bored with the women he met, that they did little for his intelligence or for his ego; that it was no great boost to be considered fantastically-attractive by women to whom he was only physically attracted. He had used women like one uses drugs, needing more and more, becoming increasingly less satisfied, intrigued, happy…

And he confessed his original intentions with her.

He fully expected her to walk away from him, at that last point. He fully expected her to hate him, to judge him, to consider him absolutely beneath her — and, she didn’t. Even when, many times, he hated himself for what he did with women.

The memory flickered through Twenty-Six’s mind in an instant as he watched her; and his playful mood shifted urgently to express his mind’s subconscious, intense conclusion. His hands lifted to hold her face, his eyes poured silently passionate emotion into hers. His heart felt like it would burst if he did not do something; his blood surging through him like a flood, he felt a nearly-overwhelming desire to take her, then and there.

He pressed his lips to hers instead. He held himself there, held her face strongly, gently.  Their lips did not move for eternal moments, the river of his energy rushing into her, binding them together with the exact effect of touching a live wire.

Finally, after what seemed like eons, he felt his passion ease just a fraction; his lips parted and the primal part of his psyche took control. Their lips parted synchronously; his tongue found hers and danced, lapped at her mouth as he drank renewed and intermingled energy from her like a thirsty animal at a crystal spring.

She responded perfectly; there was no thought in her but him, yet her awareness of the entire plane, of the entire world became increasing complete. It felt, to her, like his passion drove her entire body and mind into perpetually-heightened states of relaxed sensitivity; this feeling – however in her life she could find it – always felt like surfing, like riding the crest of a wave into complete understanding.

Her cheek twitched suddenly, involuntarily, and she opened her eyes, glanced up. A pretty Italian stewardess looked on with eyes that admitted she’d been admiring their love for more than a few seconds. The stewardess smiled gently, her eyes approvingly warm, and her cheeks glowing with a gently fresh flush.

Thirteen gracefully pulled away from Twenty-Six and took his left hand in a fluid motion as uncomplicated as as the ocean’s waves pulling away from the seashore. Thirteen smiled slowly, easily, her cheeks and lips now painted several shades brighter than the stewardess’.

Twenty-Six’s gaze shifted from Thirteen’s face to the window for brief moments, his mind assessing the undesired pause. He turned his head towards the stewardess, lifting his eyes only enough to peripherally appraise the situation.  His jaw tensed and he fixed his gaze on the seat in front of him. His heart was exclusively Thirteen’s; and he was visibly annoyed at the disturbance. Thirteen’s thighs shifted under her skirt and Twenty-Six’s tension eased a fraction, redirected. His mind focused distantly, flicked through all of the things he would do to Thirteen if only this damned stewardess would leave.

“I’m sorry to interrupt you, but we’re preparing for departure,” the stewardess explained, glancing down at Twenty-Six’s face in an attempt to catch his unyielding gaze. Failing, her face flushed lightly and she shifted her eyes to Thirteen.

Thirteen smiled warmly at the girl and thanked her. Thirteen’s thumb lightly brushed the inside of Twenty-Six’s tensed thumb as the as she spoke; the stewardess smiled apologetically and walked away.

Thirteen moved her fingers to lay flat under Twenty-Six’s, then slipped her fingers between his and squeezed gently. His face had hardened slightly, his eyes narrowed. His hand tightened on hers fractionally, a hint of possessiveness breaking free.

“Why didn’t we stay at home?” he grumbled.

Thirteen’s lips curled into an entertained smile and she laughed. “You silly man. Because you wanted to show me that tiny island you love.” Thirteen’s eyes danced merrily as she watched for his bitter expression to fade.

Twenty-Six turned and looked into Thirteen’s merry eyes. His lips relaxed into a grin, her joy and love infecting him once again.

He shook his head lightly, like shaking off the dust of ages from his mind. His gaze fell again to her flowing skirt and he released her hand carefully. Twenty-Six leaned towards Thirteen and kissed her lips lightly.

“Right,” he uttered, slipping a warm hand beneath the light fabric at her knee, ripples of goosebumps raised in the wake as his fingers traced a line from her bare thigh to her hip.

Photo ©2016 MLM