Reward
By Parson Thru
- 1062 reads
I’m listening to a conversation on the morning train. She sounds desperate, holding onto herself so tight, but trying to appear fun and upbeat.
Eager to please.
Over-eager.
He is calm. Quiet – I can barely hear his words.
She is monopolising the conversation. Her voice strained, her words too precise as if anything less than this high-wire act would render her ordinary. Like us.
Like her parents, whom she holds up for ridicule.
First her mother, berated for her fatalism and lack of verve – for her addiction to morning TV. So meaningless, we hear.
Then her father: so serious and fatherly, though Electra is clearly at play.
There comes a point, it seems, where all that will do is a bloody scene in the kitchen. Designer knives plunged lovingly through the ribs of parents who have served their purpose, brought comfort and a good education, and who can now only shame and hinder.
The train stops.
Backwell.
They ease into the flow of chattering youth.
Sixth-formers.
Hope he gets his reward.
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Comments
I think this is brilliant.
I think this is brilliant. Like a prose poem. 'ordinary. Like us' being my favourite bit.Just brilliant.
Thanks for reading. I am grateful for your time.
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I can remember some blazers
I can remember some blazers mocking my dad as he stood waiting for a train. Naturally I pushed the young blighters onto the tracks in front of a speeding train. They didn't do that again.
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