It was dark. The liquid blackness filled the room,
all except for the dim wash of light evenly dispersed by my curtains. I hated the curtains; an ugly
puke-green that started at the top of the arch and fell mockingly to the
floor. Where the cloth was gathered
at the top it looked like little demon claws gripping from the other side,
ready to leap over the rod at any time.
I turned over and pulled the sheets up to my chin, as if it would
protect me if they decided to leap out while I was sleeping. I could hear the occasional car
speeding down the road just outside my window, and closed my eyes tighter when
headlights would sweep through my room as they came around the bend. I began to drift off, snuggled close to
the twenty-plus stuffed animals sharing my bed, my grip on my favorite unicorn
starting to loosen.
My body jolted,
and fear surged through my veins… my feet hit the carpet, their sound muffled
by it’s thickness, moving swifter than ever past the curtains, past the white wood
door and into the hall where they froze –just before the hall spilled into the
living room.
“Dad! Was that
a––-“
“GET DOWN!”
The carpet did
little to pad my fall, and would soon become damp with the tears streaming down
my face. A blurred image of my dad
was not far off, and as I came to him low to the ground, the carpet became
prickly, scratching my knees as if to hinder my determination to reach
him. We crawled, him in the lead
and I close behind, and soon we were huddled with my brother and mom in-between
the master bed and a window-less wall, staying as low as possible.
My dad’s face was rigid, and somehow a
sense of readiness presided over him in a way only described as primal; his
temple bulging, nostrils flared yet breath deep and steady, muscles tense
enough to spring forward at any moment, and his eyes, so piercing and focused,
paying full attention to his ears while searching for even the slightest
movement beyond the doorway. We
waited. My heart pounded on the
wall of my chest with no mercy, anticipating something to burst through the
front door at any moment.
I turned to face
my mom, hearing the sound of a quiet ring behind me, then a voice, “911, what
is your emergency?”

Anna,
ReplyDeleteSounds like you had quite the experience when you were younger. I loved your descriptions of how you were feeling, especially when you said, "My heart pounded on the wall of my chest with no mercy, anticipating something to burst through the front door at any moment." I felt as if I was right there with you, experiencing this whole story. You definitely grabbed my attention and kept it the entire time. Good work.
Travis