oh brother I can't believe it's true
Dec 8, 2012 20:23:00 GMT -5
Post by Kristina Northampton on Dec 8, 2012 20:23:00 GMT -5
Hear the noise of millions
stroke on endless drums
stare into the sky
they're few and far between
Lub-dub. Lub-dub. Lub-dub.
stroke on endless drums
stare into the sky
they're few and far between
Lub-dub. Lub-dub. Lub-dub.
Juniper is just outside. They are gone now. You can do this. Kristina was standing before the door to Dr.Neville's office, Juniper was in the waiting area outside, and all that was between her and an end to this was time and a block of wood. When she ran her fingers along the white-painted block, there was no life, no memory; no noise of manufacture nor the wind of yesteryear breezing against the hard bark - this was a dead space, a void in which nothing was to be seen. The brass knob was unliving, dead, without feeling or thought or memory or purpose, nothing more than an arrangement of metal with no history - perhaps they had taken it away. Perhaps this was her punishment, for daring to defy them. Could she still pull out? She could run away, run from Juni, back to her dorm, construct a lie to explain it away, make everything safe again and carry on, obey the voices, do as they told her and hope that they would forgive her, like friends do.
I don't want to let you go to the promised land
I don't want to let you go; I want to hold your hand
I don't want to let you go until I understand
I don't want to let you go; I want to hold your hand
I don't want to let you go until I understand
Her hand wrapped around the knob. She turned it, and the complex mechanisms of the door swung into action, the block lifting from the hole in the wood, the hinge bending to allow her in, allowing her to bend her surroundings to the way she needed them. Quite astounding inventions, doors; they made inaccessible things accessible, allowed a person to explore the world or be trapped indoors, to deny entry or to allow exit, to provide a vast library of metaphors and similes from which the aspiring writer might draw a message - such a humble device, so simple, and yet it held such importance. Peering through the crack between the door and the frame, Kris mewed, "Doctor Neville?" A response came, and like a mouse facing a dragon, she opened the door properly, stepped through and slammed it shut, leaning against the wall, rubbing her arm through the long woollen sleeves of her jumper, her boots moving up against each other as she gazed at the man who had haunted her nightmares for so long.
"Doctor, can I...are you...I have a problem." Inching closer along the wall, as though if she did not the ceiling might collapse or a spike would come and impale her like a kebab, trying desperately to avoid Dr.Neville's eyes, Kristina struggled to spit out the acidic truths that had laid within her for so long. "It's...my head. I hear voices, Doctor. I need help."