Kalliope 2015 | Page 196

white piece of chalk between his fingers. He had the gift of charisma too; I fought the thought off with a shiver. I recognized the proud sense of completion in his inflated chest, and realized that I envied him. I fought my way out of the gawking audience and increased my pace as I turned away from the “Box.” While I walked I thought, I could do better. The art supply store was a block away from my room, but in the seven years that I lived there I’d avoided it like a terminal illness. When I reached the small door, I hesitated a moment, taking a breath that I didn’t know I still needed after all those years. Stepping inside the shop was like taking a step back in time to a world of colors that I forgot existed, a world of smells I forgot I knew, a world of emotions I forgot I felt. I was home, and the weight that had been building on my shoulders since I was thirteen began to melt away. Of course, I thought, it wasn’t art that had ruined me. “Can I help you with anything?” the old woman behind the register asked carefully. I realized that I had stopped in the middle of the store, and that a tear had escaped down my cheek. I smiled as I wiped it away. “Where do you keep the pastels?” She pointed behind her to aisle four and I made my way there slowly, letting a stupid smile paint my face as my gaze caressed the oncefamiliar tools that he had taught me to use. I ached to feel the weight of each and every one in my new, larger hands. I spent a good ten minutes in front of the pastels. With each color came a memory that I had tried to lock away years ago. Violet: my elephant mug. Navy: the comforter. Olive: the painting I ruined. Scarlet: the blood I washed from between my legs in his small bathroom. Orange: the jumpsuit he wore for a month before he finished his possession sentence and skipped town. I wondered if the sick fuck thought about me as much as I thought about him, about my stolen childhood. That’s when I knew the years of silence were finally coming to an end. 196