Sasha Thurmond
Silhouette...where are you? Here kitty, kitty, kitty!
Damn that druggie former friend and his dealing girlfriend. She let Silhouette
outside. I was just there for one night before I'd catch a flight back home to
the east coast where I was born.
The condo complex was ticky-tacky endlessly all the same and the repetition
and the people staring at me as I drove around and around with my passenger
door wide open hoping Silhouette would hear me and leap in the car, making me joyful
and myself again. Not a car he'd recognize since it wasn't mine. I just
borrowed it...declared I was taking it to find my cat and my ex-friend had no
say in the matter at all. Ricky Ticky Tavi, like a mongoose I was gonna find
him if it was the last thing I ever did in my spiraling life, I swore to God.
Damn...I got a D.U.I. in that dinky little Mormon town in Idaho where I
went to ski for a winter; like what a great idea while my boyfriend was in jail
so at least I could lay low and traverse the law and chaos I tried to escape
since my life was gone like Silhouette was.
Wow....what a stupid idea, like most of mine were on the merry go round I was
living. I took a geographic , for fun or something...returning to the saner
parts of my childhood excluding all the drama and combustible parents and
dysfunction. Now I was not only estranged from my boyfriend...I lost my key to
responsibility and love and care who had always been my touchstone.
"Silhouette...where are you? Here kitty, kitty, kitty." Everyone
thought I was nuts and out of control and an accident waiting to happen.
Waiting to happen? It already had happened time and time and time again. Maybe
I should believe it and turn it around myself. Right...not so easy a thing to
do, I secretly had discovered but swiftly dismissed as an aberration of my
mind.
Holy smokes...the state troopers found me hanging over the Snake River in
my car but they saved me! That damn blizzard disoriented me on my way home from
the cowboy saloon where my car wouldn't start when the bar was closing. I was a
cocktail waitress...my job to earn money and ski the incredible, awe inspiring mountains.
What a blast I was going to have. I was an avid skier who learned as a young
child when the roses were red and smelled like an overpowering perfume
confection.
However, like Thomas Wolfe said in 'You can't go home again. " I have
to see a thousand times before I see it Once." Now...I said the state
troopers saved me. Then why did they take me to the county jail instead of
taking me home? I was being victimized, treated unfairly, what a joke they
convoluted my untenable situation.
"Silhouette ! Where are you? "Now people were waking up in the
ticky-tacky rows and they are curious who the woman was wending her way with
her car door open and screaming something incoherent. My mind was screeching,
my heart was pounding I couldn't go home again without him.
Those Mormon neighbors of mine banged on my door every Sunday morning
inviting me to walk with them on the Mormon Path and learn what they knew about
life and salvation. It was sort of sweet but me, spend seven hours every Sunday
doing whatever they did all day long was definitely not for me. I was always
nursing a hangover and needed to recoup by sleeping like Goliath. They even
gave me a Mormon Bible the entire fifteen person family had signed. Do you
think I should have read it? Or the Bible? Or the Koran? Or Anything about a
Higher Power ? I sometimes thought I wasn't worth saving...fleetingly before I
reminded myself how fun and unfettered my exciting life was. "Don't tie me
down." Yeah.
"Silhouette...." My voice was getting hoarser, the hours were
passing like a tortoise and the damn car was running out of gas. A gray
apparition whizzed by me mentally and clunked down flat on my lap! Holy
smokes...it was Silhouette climbing up my chest !! "Silhouette...you're
with me again...I won't ever let you get lost again. It wasn't your
fault...maybe mine for hanging around with sketchy people. But never again
Silhouette. We're going home again." I hoped that Thomas Wolfe could
enlighten me.
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Story and illustration by Sasha Thurmond who is an artist and writer living on a farm in South Carolina with her horse and other animals and who also finds time to write, paint, and take photographs. She is a graduate of the Master of Fine Arts program at Cornell University, where she studied with Steve Poleskie.
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