Her tailbone impacted against the stone, and the shudder jolted through her entire spine. She bent her knobbly knees, pulling it up to her chest, dragging her heels against the stone in a move that scraped off the skin from her feet, leaving the inner layers exposed. Tender. Raw.
Her cold, frozen stumps of fingers hooked into the hem of her pyjamas, still shaking like that of an epileptic’s. The sweat-soaked, cheap nylon stuck to her skin as they tugged it up, bunching the material about her knees, exposing her shins to the fire. The numerous, sparse hair littering her legs, a testimony to her absolute lack of self-grooming, shivered and rose to the air, responding to the heat, almost as if seeking out the scorching embers. Her chin buried in the crook between her knees, her lashes blinked at the red and orange that had grown to eclipse her entire vision, and her own exposed skin- glowing almost unearthly, sickly in the light.
She was locked in. The room was silent. The walls were closed. The loneliness buried to the hilt, harrowed into her very bone. Yet she could not fling her arms around a neck, press into a body heat not her own, squeeze a palm for comfort. Her fear wouldn’t allow it. And even if it did, her body would be thrown into frenzy, locked down, throat regurgitating the contents of her gut right here, yellow and steaming with a putrid stench across the reddened, warmed stone floor. If she had the breath to, she would have laughed.
Her throat swallowed, again and again, in the face of the fire, bobbing against her kneecaps. Her palate was too dry for even vomit to make its way through. And if by some relieving miracle succeeded, it would be water and black bile. Her stomach had been empty for over twenty hours. Crackers.....she’d had two of them yesterday morning.
Locked. Silent. Closed. When did it get so bad? When had it gotten so bad? It had been five years, hadn’t it? She’d done well till now, hadn’t she? The first year had been bad, but she remembered so little of it anyway......lots of tucking her head under the pillow and sleep-waking. And then Bren had come, and it had gotten better, and all her friends had left, and Reid mocked her and called her weak, and her parents regarded her with worry and fear that increased day after day- when she withdrew from running about with her neighbours and spoke to thin air and refused to sleep under a roof or touch living skin- mounted to dizzying proportions, till they stopped being her friends too- and she was fine, because she had gotten better. She laughed, and joked, and ate food, and slept and maybe it wasn’t all in such a ‘normal’ fashion as they pleased, but she did. And then she’d come to Hogwarts and she hated it, but between worthless rivalries and daily arcane lessons.....it almost seemed alright.
But magic crawled through the halls of this castle, its walls bled with it, its stones remained submerged in it, the same magic that had taken her Barbara away before they could even know what a wand looked like, and that very poisonous, ramiferous thing was flowing beneath her bare feet right now, and that very choking, wondrous vice flowed through her veins, ensheathed her heart because she was f*cking born with it, and Bren was gone again and her throat was closing up, vision darkening and faces of fire spewed out from those red sparks dancing in her vision, jeering and leering and coaxing her to fall forwards- just an inch. And her nose was twitching, because she was leaning and it was turning, recoiling from the heat, the blasted, burning, warming, blinding, numbing heat.....
And damn it she was a coward, yes, a sniveling coward, because she was too scared to fall forward that last inch, that fear kept her alive and breathing- all these years, the churning, uneasy sensation preventing her that first year to fall into a lifetime of sleeping with her eyes open, that forced her now to fixate on something, anything to convince her that a world outside her head existed. It caught at her ears then, a light exhale of breath against the air: and she seized on to it with grasping hands, imitating that light push of oxygen: rising through her lungs, travelling through the nasal passages, then forced out. It drew in again, and Rika sucked in her stomach, sucking the air pressure in along with her white, pressed lips and the minutes passed by, slowly, achingly- her painstakingly matching, aligning her breaths to fall with the inspiration and expiration of the only other person in the room. Hot, hot, stinging moisture squeezed past her eyelids and never had her heart felt more grateful, her mind more feverishly relieved.
Thank you. Thank you.
How easy it was to get lost in the maze of the mind; but now she had a skylight which allowed a stray ray to kiss her face, a ventilator to push her face against and breathe. She had an existence, she was more than the empty space that she so often felt drifted meaninglessly through these walls, she had to be, because the fear would allow nothing less. She had mass, the stone warming her backside was real, she drew in oxygen from the air and exhaled out carbon dioxide, she had a presence, what she did mattered. She had a voice.
“Have you ever wondered what your funeral would be like?” Her voice meandered on, a thin, fraying thread of sound.....but she had to fill the room, she had to. “If people would wear black, or someone might not care enough, so put on a yellow t-shirt underneath. If someone would write eulogies to your name so that they could sound more important. If people would cry. If your stone would be big and white, or small and grey and snuck in the corner of a tree. If it would make the slightest bit of a difference.”
Yes, it was filling the room. It was. Or atleast, this tiny little corner where flames licked at stone and skin, as if they were all alike. “I have. I even have my epitaph written.”
That was a lie. She had thought, but she had never written it down- and suddenly it seemed imperative that she share it to the room, to the ears of the girl who’d probably stopped listening a long time ago. The flame might start preferring skin any second....or maybe the latter would seek the former out itself.
Her throat swallowed again.
“ ‘Go ‘way now, its no point. I believe in reincarnation, so I’ve left all my money to myself.’ “