Mosaic | Page 50

the risks I’d foolishly take to defend them. Most of all, I wouldn’t again have to face the stifling grief that would replace their company when they were eventually lost. Although I was alone, I wouldn’t let myself become lonely. It terrified me, to be honest, so I didn’t think about it. I was the only company I really needed and on a journey where death confronted me nearly every day, it was nice to know I could trust who I traveled with. We’d chat, myself and I, about the same old things, occasionally reminiscing on the past when we’d come across a scrap of humanity that was almost completely absorbed by the dense ash. Sometimes though I’d go too far, and she’d be there, waiting for me as she had always done. I longed to embrace her again, to feel her presence in my arms and by my side. I’d give anything to trace her lines again and to see my entire world in her shining, emerald eyes. I struggled to ignore the ghosts of my past, her ghost specifically, knowing temptation would lead to my death as insanity grasped at me, entangling itself with my old haunts. So I was alone, but not lonely. Never lonely. Wandering aimlessly, more like drifting really, I stumbled through the tangled net of low hanging branches and tripped myself in the thick ash. I didn’t know how much longer I could keep this all up. I had nothing without her. I had no reason to struggle through this life anymore. My mind clouded, I grew disoriented. I stumbled over something, whether it was a stump, an old tire, or a body, I didn’t know but I fell to the ground nonetheless. I pounded the ash-blanketed earth with my fist in desperate anger. It was my fault, really. She was my responsibility, she was my entire existence, and I lost her. I hated myself for that and because I knew she 45 still never stopped loving me despite my failure. Kneeling in the ash, the weight of everything I felt was beginning to bear down on me. I was completely alone and I missed her immensely. Yet, what could I do now? I didn’t have an answer for myself but I knew that I couldn’t just sit there. I had to do something. Against the smothering haze of the past, I forced myself to stand and continue walking. I was not focusing on my destination, but on the fact that walking north, if that was even the direction I was still going, was all I had left to do. Nothing but walking north, alone. I stomped through the trees as they swayed in my wake, the wind playing puppet master. I was tired. I hadn’t eaten in days and my supply of fresh water was down to a few sips. Although I knew I couldn’t outrun my past, I had to try. So I pushed on, trudging fiercely through the ash as it grabbed at my boots, weighing me down and trying to shackle me to the very thing I was fighting to escape. Upon bursting through a small stand of tightly grown aspen, I found myself in a field. The ash blew around wildly out in the open, but as I scanned the clearing I noticed a small s