Synaesthesia Magazine Eat | Page 15

A prickly throat, stomach bugs: every symptom was seen simply as evidence of his internal world. His florid fantasias saw the light only when his parents took him to the doctors. He had developed stomach cramps. Though he knew the secret source of his pain, he refused to divulge it. The family doctor struggled towards diagnosis. Feeling the young boy’s stomach, he thought he could sense something inside, hardened growths of an unspecified nature. The doctor, concerned by these anomalies, arranged for x-rays. In his wellused placatory tones, the doctor explained what would happen. They would take a picture of his insides. At this, the boy brightened. For the first time he would see what lay within. His mother held back tears as she watched her little boy stand patiently as the camera snapped him. The radiographer must deal with all sorts, she thought, all manner of wriggling terrors. Her son did her proud, looked almost gleeful. Some days later, they returned to view the x-rays. The boy looked in wonder at these illuminated images. His insides exposed to the world. To his great surprise, they did not reveal an inner kingdom, a bristling of lush growth. But they did reveal something unexpected, at least to his parents. With his pencil, the doctor pointed to the problem. In this land of shadows, hovered the outlines of tiny toy-soldiers freefalling beneath his ribs. An interrogation began. He had swallowed them, he said, so that they could play in the forest. They would be able to look after the trees. This strain of logic was lost upon his parents. He was lucky not to have choked to death, the doctor explained. His mother conjured images of her boy, blue, an AWOL soldier blocking his windpipe. She clutched him close. Then thought better of it.