Under Rose-Tainted Skies

‘Norah. Have. I. Ever. Lied. To. You? Answer me.’

‘No.’ I have to listen now. It’s been said. It’s out there. An alternative thread of logic that I can’t ignore. Sometimes I imagine my mind is an arena, and there’s a droid in there, stomping around, looking all high and mighty, fending off anything logical that tries to invade its space. But then, every now and again, common sense sneaks in. It too is a droid. It carries a sword to cut things down.

‘Trust me now, okay? It’s nothing serious,’ Mom says, overenunciating every word. ‘I’m all right. You’re all right. We’re all right. Say it with me.’ She begins the reassurance spiel again, but my lips aren’t quite ready to make real sentences.

She chants the words three times before I find my voice and join in. The heel of my hand drums against the side of my head, trying to make the words stick.

‘I’m all right. You’re all right. We’re all right.’ I sound like I’ve been swigging liquor for a solid week.

‘Baby, it’s going to be okay. I’m going to be home soon. The doctors just want to keep me for a few days, a week, tops.’ A small collision. They don’t keep you in the hospital for a whole week following a small collision. They turned my gran out after only six days, and she’d had a fricking heart attack. There’s more to this.

‘Are you hurt bad? You can be honest with me. I can handle it,’ I lie.

‘Nah, baby. I promise. They’re just being thorough, probably taking advantage of my insurance.’

She’s not going to tell me why they want her to stay in so long. She’s trying to protect me. I may never know the full extent of her injuries, and while I’m 100 per cent certain this will save my sanity in the long term, right now it sends me into a spin.

My breath hitches. This can’t be happening.

I wince and let my body sink lower. Pressing my back against the drawers, I bring my knees up to my chest and hug them tight. I like how sturdy the wood feels against my back. I like how small I feel squashed against the floor.

‘Norah,’ she snaps; it feels like a sharp slap. ‘Listen to me. We’re not freaking out about this, right?’ I nod. Pointless because she can’t see me. ‘I’m safe here. You’re safe there, like always. You don’t have to leave the house. You don’t have to do anything but sit tight and make believe this conference is lasting a little longer than expected. You’re all right. Say it back to me?’

Mom refuses to hang up the phone until she can hear steadiness in my voice. I’m not so selfish that I can’t fake it and let her get back to her sickbed. She’s tired. I can tell by the croak that starts to punctuate her words.

‘Dr Reeves is going to come over today, okay?’ she says. ‘Just to make sure you’re all right. You’re not alone, Norah. We wouldn’t leave you alone, okay?’ I hum, let her know I’m listening, but between me and myself, I can barely understand a word she’s saying. She tells me she loves me and that we’ll talk later.

My cell goes dead and I am plunged into silence. It’s so quiet, I can’t hear anything, like when you’re submerged in the sea.

I’m not all right. It doesn’t matter how many times I tell myself I am; I’m not. My common-sense droid has put up an amazing fight, but he is defeated, lying in pieces on the arena floor.

I’m shutting down. My mouth is numb. A black frost creeps in around the edges of my vision.





Moss has started to cover my skin by the time this panic attack is spent.

I have to get up.

I’m sticky and there’s this residual tremor jit-jit-jitter-bugging its way through my muscles, but it’s time to stand and retake control of my limbs. I need a soundtrack, some droll overture played on the world’s smallest violin, as I pull myself up and force my knocking knees to take the weight. It’s like finding your strength after an intense bout of flu. I wobble across my bedroom, clinging to everything I pass, trying to make it to the kitchen because it’s a couple of degrees cooler in there and/or, at the very least, I can climb inside the gargantuan fridge and ice myself off.

Except when I make it to the kitchen, there is no air and I still feel like I’m being crammed into a closet. So I keep going, forcing my legs forward until I reach the front door.

The two locks that I rely on to keep me safe turn into twenty as I scramble to lift latches, turn keys, slide bolts. There’s so much clicking. Click-click-clicking. I want to scratch away my scalp.

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