Author S. K. Nicholas

x and i: a novel

a journal for damned lovers vol 1-3

The Absence of You

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In some fast food joint in the centre of town, I eat a burger and chips while looking up your Instagram profile on my phone. Those around me are discussing the film they’ve just seen, but I’m outside of their conversation. Looking at you on the broken screen of my Samsung, I smile at your smile, and I laugh at how even after so long, you’re still my girl. Rolling a cigarette, a fight breaks out in the entrance of the restaurant between two groups of kids. Part of me hopes it gets nasty, and that a knife is produced and one or more of the fuckers gets stabbed up. Perhaps they’ll die? It wouldn’t be much of a loss. What do they have to offer this place anyway? Yeah, I know, I’m still so nihilistic, but at least I’ve got something to show for my life as opposed to those boneheads. Focused on you as you look up at me from beneath the table, I close my eyes and picture us together. There’s love sometimes, and it reaches inside my chest and squeezes my heart back to life. And then there’s absence. The absence of you, and the absence of her. Eating the last of my chips as the kids erupt into violence before washing away further down the street in a wave of mutilation, I chew my fingernails and think about your legs and your neck and then The Oort Cloud and what lies beyond. If you were to go far enough, would you meet those who have gone before? If you went even further, would you meet God? If you did, would he be alive, or would he have gone in his sleep like those old people that used to play cards with my grandparents in that room in the library at the top of the road they used to live at? I never knew you back then, how could I, and yet somehow you’ve invaded my memories just the same as you’ve done to my dreams.

A Journal for Damned Lovers on Amazon.co.uk

A Journal for Damned Lovers on Amazon.com

12 responses to “The Absence of You”

  1. Absolutely beautiful. My first thought after this is, go find her and go get her back. Don’r spend another minute alone at any of those bars that even if the comfort and listen to the dreams of its inhabitants, also drains them.

  2. even if they* comfort

    1. Thank you very much 🙂 Such an action would be the most sensible and logical, and yet life is never that straight forward somehow, is it?
      Still, I guess that’s what makes love worth fighting for, isn’t it?

      1. So well said. I fully agree with you.

  3. Wow. You always write such immersive tales.

    1. Thank you, Sarah. I’m so glad you enjoyed this one.

  4. I’m really pleased I found you… and your words! I missed them! Beautiful writing, as always! I’ve been suffering from writers block for too long. Everything I type is too stiff. This isn’t the place for moaning, though! Just wanted to say hey, from an old friend x

    1. Thank you, Lucy. It’s nice hearing from you. I hope you are well. It sucks to hear you’re suffering from writer’s block. It got the better of me for far too many years, and nothing seemed to shake it. But eventually it goes. Hard work and perseverance. A bit of luck, also 🙂 x

  5. Beautifully romantic, but totally now!

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