Sunday, October 30, 2011

Chapter Forty-Two: Visionary

Irish was devastated. Her grandmother was gone, and nobody would tell her how she died! Did they think she was stupid? That saying "she's in a better place" would placate her? Her face tear-stained, Irish falls into a fitful sleep.
She finds herself in a blurry dream world, Nathalie walking towards her from the kitchen. "Is this real?" Irish wonders blearily, not sure if she really cares. Her grandmother is here. Not gone, not dead. Right here, those familiar blue eyes looking sadly at her.



"Gamma?" Irish asks childishly, still shocked. She stares down at the chess pieces in front of her, trying to think of what to say. Her mind is fuzzy, like she's only half here.
"Irish, sweetheart." Nathalie whispers, and Irish strains to hear her. "Let's play chess, it'll be easier to talk if our spirits are closer together." Irish nods as she pulls up a chair and makes the first move.



"I'm surprised you're not alarmed at my presence. You know this isn't just a regular dream, right?" Nathalie asks softly. Irish nods with a small smirk.
"I don't tend to dream much at night, let alone have lucid dreams. So, yeah, I suspected it was a bit of paranormal working here. But I wanted to see you again, so why would I complain?" Irish has to laugh at her grandmother's flabbergasted expression. "Hey, I may not be a genius, but I'm pretty damn logically."
"Language Irish!" Nathalie tries to scold, but only starts laughing with Irish.




The laughter dies down as Irish realizes this will be the last time she'll see Nathalie until she passes on. "It's going to weird without you here." Irish mumbles as she makes her move. "Ty's going to bury himself in police work to forget about you, and Roxanne's just never around. Seriously, she must think plants are more important then her children. Sometimes I hate her!" Nathalie shakes her head softly, looking slightly disappointed.
"You don't hate her, you're just hurt. But Irish, she's your mother. Even if she's not perfect you need to respect her. I've made many mistakes in my life, and I didn't even realize many of them until I passed on. She's human too." Irish shrugs softly, but it's evident that she understands what Nathalie is saying. Trying to change the subject, she asks the one question that has been itching at her ever since this dream...vision...whatever it is started.



"Why did you visit me Gramma? I'm fine, I'm sure Dad or Isa would need to see you more." Irish asks softly.
"You're not fine sweetheart, you miss Ned and I very much. More then you would like the rest of the family to know. You never did quite get over Ned's death, did you? Seeing him in his ghost form helped, but you were always Gampa's girl." A soft tear falls down Irish's cheek, and Nathalie reaches over to brush it away.
"And really Irish, you're the most open to this kind of vision. Even though I was a ghost hunter, Tyson really never believed my stories. I think he thought they were tall tales, or exaggerations. He's a smart man, my Ty-Ty, but doesn't quite get that logic and creativity aren't that different. I can't reach him, as he wouldn't believe this to be more then a dream."
"Gramma-" Nathalie shushes her softly, giving Irish a knowing smile.
"I'm getting to Isadora, you silly girl. Isa is more open then Ty, but she's not as close to me as we were. She's been an independent soul since she was born, perhaps you are the only one she'll ever be close too. Isadora is much like your Uncle Thorne in that way, without the insanity. I did give her a gift however, but it'll be a while until it appears. Until then, you'll have to be there for her, and the rest of the family." She pauses, and the vision grows blurrier. I'm sorry sweetheart, it's morning now. I wish I didn't have to leave, but it's time now. I love you Irish." With that sudden farewell, Irish wakes up to bright sunshine. She buries her head into the pillow and starts to cry, finally letting herself feel the grief that she never truly dealt with.



Isadora hasn't spoken for a few days now. Sure, she's said all the bullshit you're supposed to say when you talk to people, but she hasn't said anything she's actually meant. She doesn't want to talk about it, she doesn't give a damn what they think she should be feeling. Isa thinks that Irish understands, at least a little more then everybody else. She's just there, not pushing her or forcing her to make up some fucked up lie about how she's feeling like she's going to crumble any moment. She's just...cold. Numb. She's not feeling like she's going to burst into tears over this, she feels oddly disjointed from the whole thing. The only thing she can do is paint.



She wanted to make a skeletal angel, as haunted and lost as she feels right now. But for Irish's sake, she'll make a nice lighthouse with a nice island. But she'll make the water stormy and murky, a small speck of the turmoil that she's hidden away within herself.



Irish is struggling with her homework, and it's pissing her off. Well, it's not really the homework's fault. She's just so worried about her family, they all seem silent and lost within themselves. Isadora won't talk, Roxanne won't sleep, and Tyson is so...freaking cheerful! But his eyes completely broadcast how sad he felt about Nathalie's death. She knows that Tyson was always much closer to Nathalie then he was to Ned. So when Tyson comes over to help with her homework, she can't make herself decline, despite the fact she knows that her homework will remain woefully incomplete.



Nathalie was always there for him when Ned was off fishing, and they shared a passion for logic. It makes sense that Tyson would grieve for her harder. But to not let himself grieve at all terrifies Irish. She's knows that it'll explode in his face, like a poorly made chemistry concoction. She's done that before with Ned's death, spending the first night forcing the tears to go away. It seemed to work until she screamed and yelled at Nathalie in the morning, the one who was suffering the most. Hopefully Dad realized that before he did the same to her, or Isa or Roxanne.



"So...you're struggling with this question right here. That's easy!" Irish rolls her eyes, advanced functions is not THAT easy!
"For the genius who's already done this course, maybe, but not for me! Ugh, I HATE MATH!" Tyson gives her a fatherly pat on the back, perhaps trying to comfort her. She isn't really sure.
"Hm, I've never had that problem, being the genius boy and all." Irish gives a frustrated glare and he stops with that line of thinking. "I was never one for English though, too many rules that you had to learn. Then you had to break them sometimes, and poetry...don't get me started on poetry! I get your pain sweetheart." He pauses for a moment, and Irish wonders if that had a double meaning.
"While I love hearing about your English agony, I want to get to the bottom of this stupid math question!" Irish grumbles as Tyson starts laughing at her. In his fit of laughter, he points out a small section towards the top of her equations.
"It's just a typo honey, you have everything else right. You're smarter then you think!" Irish lightly swats him in the head, still annoyed but feeling much better about the equation. Now if only it was something as inconsequential as a typo that was hurting her family...



Tyson starts to stand up, a lingering sadness in his eyes despite laughing just moments ago. "You come to me if you have any more questions, alright?" Tyson asks, and Irish knows that this is more then homework.
"I will Dad, I love you." Irish can feel, rather then see, Tyson's grief. His familiar grin is there, but it doesn't quite reach his eyes anymore.
"I love you too sweetheart." He kisses her on the cheek, his five o'clock shadow bristling against her soft skin. Irish touches her cheek after he leaves, her heart aching in grief for her family. She hates to see them hurting, but she hopes it's the kind of pain that makes them stronger in the end.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Chapter Forty-One: We Need To Say Goodbye

Irish wants to make her father proud, and she knows that she's been a bit of a recluse lately.  Okay, maybe a lot. She's just not the confident type, that's Isa's role. But she's not really shy either, maybe she just needs to practice a bit?
"I really would like a boyfriend, Isa already has one. I don't really wanna be a crazy old cat lady." Irish sniggers, she hates cats. "They're just too fuzzy, and furry, and...and, too snobby." She thinks with a smile.



Irish starts to practice a speech she has to do for school, but she gets sidetracked.
"Hakuna Matata! What a wonderful phrase! Hakuna Matata! Ain't no passing craze!" Her voice off-key, she continues to sing, feeling the sun shine through the window and tasting the salty breeze on her tongue. "It means no worries, for the rest of your days. It's our problem-free philosophy! Hakuna Matata!"



 She stopped suddenly, hearing a light chucking from the other side of the room. Her mouth forms a perfect O, her cheeks flushing a light red. Tyson struggles to keep a straight face, but his lips keep twitching.
"Dad! I-I-I was just-" Irish stammers, what kind of person just randomly sings when practicing a report?
"Save it Irish," Tyson says with a smug grin. "I was right!" Iris opens her mouth, then shuts it.
"What?" She asked, confused. Right about what?
"That Roxanne's horrid singing would be passed down to one of the children!" Irish merely grins, she knows her singing voice is a little off. Isa once said it sounded like chickens being slaughtered.




"And that you're letting go of that control freak thing you've got too. Maybe we should sneak into the local Karaoke bar, I'm sure that you'll scare all the pervs away with your voice." Irish laughs as Tyson runs off, a glitter of happiness in his eyes. She's pleased that bettering herself has made her dad so happy, and she feels a bit freer too.



 Her confidence back now that Tyson has left, Irish practices her sexy bitch face. "Nuh-uh! You ain't messing with me and my man!" Irish sneers, then she starts to giggle uncontrollably. Now she just has to get a man!



Nathalie is running around the neighbourhood, her heart is thumping heavily as shoe hits pavement. The air is fresh and crisp, with just the right salty tang of ocean breeze. She feels completely free from the constraints of her grief, she is free to run and laugh and be with her grandchildren.



The only thing that was ruining this lovely dusk jog is an aching pain in her stomach. Nathalie isn't sure what it is, only that it seems to be getting worse. Maybe she'll just take it easy when she gets back home? She's getting pretty old after all.



"Ow!" She groans as she suddenly is forced to stop. "It-it's like I-I'm being stabbed!" Nathalie screams as the pain grows more intense, more agonizingly horrible.



Curled up in a bush, she knows she's going to die. She didn't plan on dying like this, she planned on passing on in her sleep, knowing her family was close to her. She wants to see her grand-babies one more time, give one more kiss to her son. No, Nathalie knows that she's going to die alone, only 100 feet away from her home.



She falls into the grass, soft blades tickle at her aching skin. The ground is cold. She fights weakly, her voice caught in her throat. If only she could scream...Her breathing stills as the stress of the stomach pain stops her aged heart. She lets out one last breath, praying to every deity she knows that her family will be alright with her. Her world goes from green and blue to pitch black.




Tyson finds her several hours later, long gone from the physical world. He decides to hide her blue, withered body in the local cemetery, along with Ned's urn. He cries as he lays Nathalie into the ground, hot tear dropping on the muddy ground. He knows that he can't tell the family that Nathalie died completely alone. It would devastate them, just like it has devastated him. Late at night, he can't sleep, thinking of Nathalie blank blue eyes staring up at him in horror. Tyson looks through the telescope, a little sad but happy that Ned and Nathalie can finally be together for eternity.