Songs in a Room by Judy Mitchell
Inside,
behind the half-closed curtain, we sat on the rug, smoking, flicking ash into the
empty grate as mournful lyrics told us of sorrow, regret and lost love in those
places where he had loved so many women – downtown New York, Quebec, a Greek island.
I wanted to be in those places, independent, away from the confine of days in school
uniform, the sound of bells measuring the day into lessons, feet on corridors,
slamming doors and the scrape of chairs on parquet floors. That evening, the
school day was swept aside by that deep, melancholy voice frayed by cigarettes
and whiskey: the half spoken, half sung poetry of Leonard Cohen.
We
sat and mouthed the words of every song, sharing the burden of love and loss as
the sun dropped behind the allotments and the children were called inside. We kissed,
our bodies entwined on the black rug. The record ran out and we left those places
by rivers and temples to return to the Yorkshire pit village and the sticky
dust of summer.
Later,
he walked me to the corner, to the bus stop, both of us tipped into
introspection by the singer’s words. Then the grinding of the downward shift of
gears, the faint squeal of the double decker’s brakes as it came to a stop. I
found a seat and as the bus pulled away, I looked behind me but he was already
on his way back to the house and the room with the orange curtain.
I
left him without a word. No way to say goodbye.
What a lovely flash fiction Judy. Oh to be back at school!
ReplyDeleteSusie x
Lovely piece
ReplyDelete