Written Words:
[u]Kitten[/u]
“It’s a difficult thing to believe in,” Lee says. The wind picks up and blows his hair over his eyes. He shakes his head, runs his fingers through to the back of his skull, the dyed-blue strands following obediently to each side of his face. But the wind picks back up and his hair raises and swirls in every direction in violent cirlces and a break in the breeze allows it to drop harmoniously back in his face. The air inside a canyon is never still; like a vacuum is follows along the rock walls only to come back again. He is cold. He sighs as Krista stares at him through squared spectacles. He only shakes it away. The sight is still magnificent.
“What is?” Krista asks. She stands a foot behind him, as seemed fitting, peering her blue, curious, constantly working and troubled eyes into his. Her long, curly red hair is pulled back into two braided pig tails. Two dimples appear in her rounded cheeks as she pulls her lips together. His face is stoic, his eyes vacant. She brushes along his side and lays her head on his shoulder, sliding an arm round his waist. She scratches her nails into his flesh. He winces but places his arm round her, thumb massaging her neck, four fingers pressed across her throat. She curls herself into it. She is a kitten. Her neck is open to him. They both stare in silence at the sight before them. The slight whistle of the never-ending breeze, the cool, rushing sounds of the river, the onslaught of sensations causing an unconscious reappraisal of …
“Heaven,” he tells her. “It is a difficult thing to believe in.”
She feigns weak laughter that collapses to a dramatic whimper and she presses her face into his chest. She drags her nose up and kisses his collar, wrapping both arms around him. She is warm; he closes his eyes. She pulls skin into her mouth then squeezes gently her teeth. He lets his head drop to the side. He runs a hand over her hair, intricately woven. Shr drags her tongue up and to the very tip of his chin and he turns his head upward, exposing his neck. With a dramatic pause she casts a sly glance at his face and places a kiss on his cleft chin. A brightness causes his eyes to flutter open and thick, white clouds stare at him before a vast, blue sky. She makes her way to his earlobe. He feels his way through her hair to her braids. She bites his ear. A large cloud, with the sun lurking behind, is stained a deep orange. He grasps her braids in a fist and thrusts her head back. She acts confused; he stares in silence, looks past her. Green bunches of trees and bushes sway together far beneath them. His pupils soften and his temples lighten. But his hair is blown in circles over his face again, and Krista’s eyes narrow and she giggles to herself. He looks her stern in the face then drops her braids, resting his eyes back in the distance. She squeals and slaps her palm between his legs, squeezing what she finds there. His gaze falters and becomes intense, but it forces his pupils to relax again. She rubs it a moment; he says nothing. The kitten can play as she wants.
“It’s not hard,” she says, letting go. She turns and walks along the rock. Thet stand in a crevice of the canyon, the sandstone rock bumpy and jagged but still even, creating a ledge that descends a few meters over, down and inwards, deeper into the wall of the rock. Krista traces her finger along this wall as she walks. She shakes her hips at him, her eyes on the ground. He casts his eyes away. Above him is the vast, blue sky, behind is the cold, indifferent rock. Three hundred feet down a river is passing through. “Once you realize that it’s there, you feel stupid for ever not knowing, for ever doubting.”
The words dance from her lips and are swept away and presented to Lee. He turns and follows her lead, watching her ever step. The trail narrows, becomes more jagged the further she goes. She talks as she walks.
“There are times you know what to believe. And then there are times when you just know. Say, it’s been a long day, so you go out walking. And you walk and you walk and you walk. You stare at the stars, the constellations. Those balls of light that are the suns of other galaxies, that are stronger, in fact, than our own sun. At the moon. You listen to the wind. You place your hand upon the breast of nature. You feel it’s heart beating. You feel your heart beating. You know that it’s heart beats through you.” Her voice trails off and she is silent. Lee hears her speaking but is not listening, the words only absorbed in him somewhere. His eyes dart warily up and down, scanning the sharp rocks and glancing every second back to Krista. Her finger still drags lazily along the wall.
“And that’s when you realize that nothing matters. None of it. No goals. No ambitions. Nothing of what your dreams have created inside your head. Because they’re not for it. They’re for us. And when you realize what you can’t do is when you realize what really you can. And that’s when you see the grand light. That’s when you …”
She turns and looks at him curiously. He stops. The wind catches her braids and flings them before her. She scans his face, her eyes hazy like she’s looking through him. Then they snap into focus and look him dead-on. She speaks quietly.
“That’s when you find heaven.”