Different Kinds of
Darkness
by Evan Guilford-Blake
The
war that is the background for what is described in the “letter” that follows, the woman who describes it and the
incidents to which she refers are, all, entirely fictional. The physical
setting is willfully indefinite. War is not a thing of time, place, generation
or specific circumstance. It is, and has always been.
And,
regretful to say, will always be.
Dear Rikki –
Good news at long last. They’re sending me home! I tried to call you but I
got the goddamn voicemail – we have got to get rid of that message. First thing
we do after I walk in the door. After you kiss me, of course, for what will
probably be the thousandth time since I get off the plane. That message sounds
sooooo sweet. So instead of me – live from 5,000 miles away – you get this.
E-mail isn’t the comforting sound of your voice, and I’ll try again later, but
I’m so excited I couldn’t wait to tell you. And, besides, I need to practice my
typing. Ignore the errors: This keyboard is really small and no way I’m gonna
let anyone proofread it.
The other good news, I suppose, is that you won’t have to come. And I’m
grateful for that. I mean, it would’ve been awful goddamn hard for you to get
in here, let alone just get here, and we couldn’t’ve afforded for you to stay
long enough to make the trip worth it.
And besides, I figure I still don’t look so good. I don’t know if I’m ready
to have the world see me like this – however this looks. There’s still some
pain – the doctor says there will be some pain at least a few more months,
maybe now and then after that, because of the nerves. You remember.
But, really, I’m a lot better. The
bandages came off this morning! For good! When they said they were going to do
it? I kept thinking: The nurse is gonna gasp like in that Twilight Zone show.
I’ll never know if she did. I thought they’d let me be awake for the unveiling
but, no, I was under. And groggy as hell when I woke up. But now I get to feel
my face again. Rik – there are lots of scars. Lots. More than I guessed there
was. I mean, I knew there’d be scars, it hurt so much, it was like my skin was
getting tore up again and again, but God, I’m so afraid of what I look like.
I’m afraid for you to see me. I know I’m ugly, and they can’t do anything
reconstructive for years, maybe never, and I don’t want to look like this, I
don’t want to look like someone little kids will scream at when they see, like
someone you’ll have to hide what you’re feeling when you see. I know you didn’t
want me for my looks in the first place, and 19 years is a long time, but,
you’re so goddamn beautiful and hey, how people look, it’s always made a
difference to me.
I guess it won’t any more, huh?
I guess it’s good I never had kids.
Anyway. I’m making progress in Braille. I still can’t read much, but I got
through a whole page today. Took me an hour, I had to go over some of the words
3 or 4 times, but there’s what the therapist calls context: If you figure out
the first letter is e and the last one is t you can figure the one between them
is probably an a. If it’s a 3 letter word, anyway. I get confused on the longer
ones. I forget what letters I read. It’s probably good I’m reading Stephen
King. I think the longest word in Salem’s Lot is vampire. And feeling that word – it conjures up lots of
images. All of them having to do with darkness. Different kinds of darkness.
I think a lot about darkness. Like being in a tunnel that’s too long to
know there is a light at the end. Before I came here, before the explosion and
the pain and the wanting to die, I loved it. Lying there with you, late at
night, pitch black and all the sounds magnified. Every breath you took, every
rustle of the sheets, the tiny tiny sound of my finger tracing the circle
around your areola, the licking of your lips before you kissed me. It’s true,
you are more aware of sounds when you
can’t see. Here, I hear planes, footsteps in the hall, the other women crying,
crying out. Sometimes I hear people die. I’m not going to die, Rikki, not for a
long time. The doctor says I’m in surprisingly good shape. I oughta be. You
can’t train other soldiers for 16 years if you’re not. But it’s gonna be hard
to live, I know that. For both of us. When I get back? we should go right away,
someplace where they’ll let us really tie the knot. You think? If you’re still
willing. And I believe you when you say you are. That’s what’s been keeping me
going the last 4 months, knowing there is a light at the end of this tunnel. I
might not be able to see it, but I can feel it. It’s warm and it feels safe. I
love you, Rik. Thanks for loving me – not because of, not in spite of. Just
loving.
I’ll see you soon.
Yours, Yasmina
* * * * *
"Different
Kinds of Darkness," ©
Guilford-Blake Corp., was podcast
in 2016 by No Extra Words (under the title "Yasmina") and was
chosen as the winner of the 2015 Green River Writers short-short fiction
competition.
Evan Guilford-Blake writes prose, poetry and plays. His work has
appeared in more than 100 journals and anthologies. His prose has won 27 awards and garnered four Pushcart Prize
nominations. His scripts have won 46 competitions. Thirty-three are published.
Evan’s published long-form prose includes the novels Animation,
The Bluebird Prince, and the award-winning story collection American
Blues. He and his wife (and inspiration) Roxanna, a talented jewelry
designer and business writer, live in the southeastern US with their beloved
rescue mutts, Baldrick and Pip.
Different kinds of horror.
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