Author S. K. Nicholas

x and i: a novel

a journal for damned lovers vol 1-3

A Broken Clock

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Opening my hand at the foot of the garden in an effort at catching snowflakes, a bird lands on it instead and pecks at my wrist. Feeling the urge to vomit, there’s a hole in the sky that lets me see back to when she was just a girl. Standing there gazing up at the heavens, the light hurts my eyes and makes me sink to my knees. The days are lifeless, and the night’s full of echoes of half-remembered memories involving trying to photograph the different stages of her smile while downing shots of foul tasting rum. Through the window comes the sound of lullabies. They drift up the stairwell and find us in bed with our clothes tossed to the floor. In moments of delirium we come undone, and only by colliding can we put ourselves back together again. A cigarette hanging from my mouth as the music of Pink Floyd sends us someplace else, the clock ticks like drums and her heart beats like exploding stars. Bodies glued by sweat, we fade from view like the glare of headlights in early morning mist. There’s a wave that needs to be surfed, but not today. Mouths opening and closing in sync with the ebb and flow of the storm, the rage subsides as we close our eyes and move out of time. It happens when you least expect it, and before you understand, it’s gone. Such is the sweet and sorrowful melody that has been the soundtrack to our lives. We pass through the years, and the world spins like it never even knew our names. We experience so many revelations, and yet it’s as if we were only ever sleeping. Exploring my face in the bathroom mirror, the lines that show my age are outnumbered by those that express my melancholy. They ooze the flavours of so many stories, but being numb gets the better of me each and every time.

14 responses to “A Broken Clock”

  1. You are one powerful roll today. Wow.

      1. You’re welcome. 🙂 x

  2. I just gasped, and realized how much literature is changing. What is this piece? Fiction? Non-fiction? Prose-poetry flash-fiction? A Journal Entry? No, it’s a freaking Blog Post, and a damn fine example of everything this new Literary Medium can and should do. I hate blowing rainbows up the rear-ends of people’s blogs, but this is a damn fine example of where literature’s going.

    1. I’m humbled by your words, I really am. Thank you for your encouragement. I too think it’s really interesting where this new medium will take us. These are exciting times indeed. Self-expression should be limitless, and long should it stay that way 🙂

  3. ‘Echoes of half-remembered memories,’ truly beautiful. In such a beautifully tragic write, this one line resonated me the most…it’s softness and fragility are obvious. x

    1. I happy that line resonated with you, and I’m happy you enjoyed the piece. Thank you for your kind words 🙂 X

  4. Hmmm quite strange, just the title and the featured picture made it for me. I liked those two more. 😬

  5. “Exploring my face in the bathroom mirror, the lines that show my age are outnumbered by those that express my melancholy. They ooze the flavours of so many stories, but being numb gets the better of me each and every time.”
    How I love that dark vein that pulsates through your writing x

    1. I’m glad you enjoy the dark vein. It always seems to work better than anything else. It gets the better of all of us x

  6. I love the way you glorify the minute details, no matter how beautiful or dark they are, as if, time slows down when I read your written piece. ❤️ Glad to have discovered this wonderful blog!

    1. Thanking you kindly! I’m glad you enjoy my blog and what you’ve read so far. Thank you for taking the time to comment 🙂

      1. The pleasure is all mine 🙂

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