my story about a prisoner. this is the forst "chapter" written on a rainy holiday in cornwall brilliant!
The clock was piercingly loud, each tick catching in the air like thunder, each tock darker and more claustrophobic than the last.
Tick
Tock
Tick
Tock
Words took too the rhythm in my mind and filled the aching absence of thought.
Guil-ty
Guil-ty
Guil-ty
My name was called, my place to stand and still my senses were deadened. The tuneless symphony continued behind my eyes.
Guil-ty
Guil-ty
“The court have found you”
Guil-ty
Guil-ty
“Guilty”
The pain I felt regaining my senses was like being wrapped in barbed wire.
The sky through the windows, the barb in my eye, the sound of crying, the barb in my ear, the despair of my grandmother, the barbs around my lungs and heart. Each breath hurt, each moment of attempted communication broke through me in shuddering sobs, my tears salting my wounds.
I wanted to take everything in, experience as much reality as I could before I was led back downstairs. Feeling the gentle fingers of the guards easing me towards the door, I leant forwards to take in the bordered sky. It was then that I saw her, framed against the window; I reached my mind out to her to turn around, to know that I’d seen her but she was gone.
The gentle fingers turned vicelike, squeezing my arms and forcing my head into the dock. The smell of polish stung my face and I looked into the eyes of my jailor, searching for some kind of connection. The look he gave me will never leave me. He was the first, he punctured my soul with that blunt expression his eyes snarling murderer.
There was a definite change in the air as we went down the stairs, not just the temperature, but the closeness. The further down we got, the more like hot breath it became, panting on my neck.
“IN, SIT”
In those few steps and with one word, I had gone from man to animal. To these people I no longer had a name; I was a number, a statistic, another stain on society that it was their job to hide.
I bent my head and obeyed, stepping over the threshold and lowering myself onto the bunk. The door was slammed shut with a racketing clunk and suddenly I was alone.
The silence was hurting my ears and I could move nothing but my eyes.
At first I looked quickly, darting my gaze as if following the flight of a nonexistent bluebottle. No. Stop. I closed my eyes and sat in darkness. The shadows soon came and the pressure of fear behind my eyelids forced them open.
I began a systematic search of the cage, looking for any possible weak point I could exploit, but knowing I couldn’t run anymore.
My gaze ran over the greasy sink and dropped to the floor. Stains of lives long lived were tattooed into the concrete telling lies of innocence and screaming for help.
The toilet was a dark hole, an escape, somewhere for the waste of the waste, the filth of the damned.
I felt a tightening around my stomach like a fist closing finger by finger, strangling my insides. I really was alone.