So I went ahead and fixed the faucet, stopping it from playing more if its rancorous music. Since I couldn't sleep, my mind started to drift, to a kind of dark question:
Writing Prompt:
What if it wasn't water making that sound?
What if it wasn't water making that sound?
That was my prompt for the introduction piece below. I would be interested to turning it into a story, but we'll see. Of course, I'm open to thoughts and interpretations here from anyone who feels like sharing - thought you might have to register on Google to leave a comment.
Short Fiction
TITLE: TBD (Runaway Faucet is a Placeholder)
I've been up for far too long, now. I can feel sleep stealing over me like a vaguely oppressive force weighing down on my eyelids. I blink for a second, and the clock shows minutes have passed. There is a bitter struggle between my eyes and my eyelids - the mind is willing, but the body is not.
Using the pale light of the fading television, I guide myself into the bedroom. I'm vaguely aware of the 'no signal' message, but the auto sleep timer should take care of that after a while. It's been on for so long, I'm surprised it hasn't shut off already.
I drift hazily past the bathroom, too weak to bother brushing my teeth before passing out in this dry heat. It doesn't really matter, it's not like there is anyone here to smell my breath anyway. It's kind of nice having a queen size bed all too myself - plenty of room to get lost in on nights like this.
I fumble for my phone in the dark, setting the alarm for seven in the morning. A tiny message tells me that I'll be waking up in four hours - well-rested, I'm sure. Before everything goes black behind the curtain of my eyes, I notice the date - as if I hadn't stared at it enough over the top of empty bottle on the table: May 14th.
The sounds of nature outside disappear immediately - no more birds rustling through the trees, no more wind wreaking havoc on the ground below. The natural static in the air crackles into nothingness and I hear nothing but my breath: in and out, slow and faint against the hazy backdrop of night.
And a steady, rhythmic dripping coming from somewhere else. Somewhere close but too far for my brain to understand.
Drip.
Water, maybe? It could be a faucet - a rush of silver and blues against white porcelain. Filling for a moment before disappearing without a thought.
Drip.
It rained recently. Greens and oranges and greys falling together reminding us that spring is here. Pooling along the gutters and fading away - slowly, repeatedly.
Drip.
Her again. Red and crimson and maroon spreading away, trying to escape the room. Reaching the edge and falling slowly to splash on the tiled floor. Her hand outstretched at an unnatural angle, her hair matted with freshly flowing life. When she hit the table, there was a snap before everything came rushing out. Only to be slowly cascading from top to bottom, seeking another place to rest.
He looks at me - like he always does - a finger pressed against his lips. The same ruby colored nightmare clutches an old trophy in one hand, dented to match the divot in her skull. It hits the floor with a rancorous clang as the soft meta bounces off the mosaic tile, but all I can hear is that steady, rhythmic reminder.
Drip.
***
Waking with a jolt is never fun. It gives me a headache every single time it happens. Sitting up quickly, I throw the sheets off of me as I fight the dizziness and the bile inducing vertigo. The phone is on the floor - must have knocked it over when the alarm started going off. It's telling me something I don't want to hear: It's 7:45 AM and I am late for work.
Just another wonderful May morning.
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