This story appeared in the November 15, 2013 issue of ShortList Magazine. The challenge was to write a story that was exactly 300 words long.
When I was a boy, I attended a school that stood by a cemetery. Mine was the last desk, the one closest to the graveyard. I spent years with my back to the darkness of it. I can remember how, as autumn descended, and winter gathered its strength, I would feel the wind blow through the window frame and think that the chill of it was like the breath of the dead upon my neck.
One day in the bleakness of a January afternoon, when the light was already fading as the clock struck four, I glanced over my shoulder and saw a man staring back at me. Nobody else noticed him, only I. His skin was the grey of old ash long
from the fire, and his eyes were as black as the ink in my well. His gums had receded from his teeth, giving
him a lean, hungry aspect. His face was a mask of longing.
I was not frightened. It seems strange to say that, but it is the truth. I knew that he was dead, and the dead have no hold over us beyond whatever we ourselves surrender to them. His fingers touched the glass but left no trace, and then he was gone.
Years passed, but I never forgot him. I fell in love, and married. I became a father. I buried my parents. I grew old, and the face of the man at the school window became more familiar to me, and it seemed that I glimpsed him in
every glass. Finally, I slept. I slept, and I did not awaken.
There is a school that stands by a cemetery. In winter, under cover of fading light, I walk to its windows and put my
fingers to the glass.
And sometimes, the boy looks.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Sunday, June 09, 2013
TEN RANDOM (BUT MUCH LOVED) BOOKS SELECTED FROM MY BOOKSHELF
Recently
the lovely folk at Foyles bookshop in London asked me to write
something for their website. It seemed like a welcome opportunity to
browse my bookshelves and write about individual books that caught my
eye. As I did so, I realized - not for the first time - that my
affection for the titles in question was often tied up with the specific
copy of the book that I owned. I could recall the circumstances under
which I had bought it, or the reasons why I had gone looking for that
book in the first place. Each copy was a marker, a little milestone on
my progress through life, and while the titles themselves are
replaceable, those particular copies can never be replaced.
Whatever the merits of ebooks, they simply don't allow the reader that degree of emotional investment in a beloved object. If you're curious, you can read more here: http://www.foyles.co.uk/john-connolly
Whatever the merits of ebooks, they simply don't allow the reader that degree of emotional investment in a beloved object. If you're curious, you can read more here: http://www.foyles.co.uk/john-connolly
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