Lovely Monster
Lovely
Monster
Shaylee Europe
Copyright © 2020 Shaylee Europe
All rights reserved.
For my mama.
Because we all have our problems.
Gasoline
“No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.”
Eleanor Roosevelt
This Is My Story
♥
The first time I saw her, I thought I hadn’t noticed much about her. Now, I know I was wrong. I noticed everything about her. What she was wearing, how her hair was styled, even the shoes she had on her feet, I can remember as clearly as if it were yesterday. I can still see her, walking past me, carrying a box with crayons and coloring books, and not meeting my eyes as she passed.
A smile had been plastered across her face, as if it were put there permanently. Looking back, I think a smile like that should remain there forever. Smiles that honest rarely come in a world like ours.
I thought she was smiling because she thought I looked funny. It wouldn't have been anything new. I was used to people snidely smiling at me as they passed. It was the price that came with a face like mine.
Everyone was against me. Talking about me as I passed, staring at me as if I were a monster, and maybe I am. Maybe I am that monster that parents warn their children about. I fit the image to a tee. When children pass me, I know they’re staring at me as if the boogeyman has just become a man and is walking among them.
But I wasn't talking about me.
I was talking about her.
Her hair was short, but that didn't seem odd to me. She had a slender neck, and a face that I could only relate to an elf. High cheekbones, green, doe-like eyes, and pale skin, all hidden beneath the pixie cut of her dark auburn hair.
I don't think I noticed the light spread of freckles across the bridge of her nose. They were there, but I failed to acknowledge them.
She had just been another smiling face, only with crayons and coloring books.
I knew she wasn't a nurse. I'd been near hospitals enough to know they didn't allow you to dress in jeans or converses.
Plus, she was too young. Even just passing her by, I knew she was around my age, maybe even a little younger. She had a child-like face, and aura. Really light, and graceful, like she was just air floating through and past me.
Of course, she had tripped as she had passed. She looked graceful, but falling was one of those things she did very well.
And quoting, but I'll tell you about that later.
The box had fell to the floor before she had, and the crayons had scattered everywhere. For just a split second, I wanted to laugh. Not many things in life made me laugh at that point, but that instance had been one where the thought had crossed my mind.
I wouldn't have laughed about it then. I was too busy being brooding and sinking in self-pity, the same way I had done for seventeen years.
I had walked a good distance past her by then, but I stopped to see her on her knees, the crayons scattered, the books open, and her palms against the floor. I don’t know why I stopped. I know why I didn’t turn around to help, like any normal person would.
I wasn't normal.
I was deformed.
I turned around to keep walking when I heard her begin to laugh. I stopped again, and turned to stare at her. She was sitting on her butt, looking at her colored mess, and laughing.
My brow raised as she turned to look at me. Even the safe, twenty foot distance we had between us, her eyes were intense, and they begged me to laugh with her.
But I didn't.
I couldn't.
Not then.
She bit her lip, though she was still giggling, despite my almost glaring stare. She gave me a smile, kind of a welcoming gesture, I guessed.
I turned, and began walking away again.
“You know, it isn't as bad as you think,” she called out, and I halted, turning around.
Her smile aggravated me, and I was ready to unleash all of my pent up aggression on her. She would make a perfect receptacle to hear exactly how bad it really was.
But she shrugged, and gave me her sly smile that I would grow very fond of, and said, “Everyone's got to fall sometime. Keeps us grounded.”
“Yeah, well, falling sucks,” I told her, as if it were some philosophical answer to life.
She shrugged. “Gives you a chance to get back up.”
“And what if you can't?” I asked.
“That's when you need someone to help you,” she answered, as if she had the answer to everything, and every question I could throw at her.
I looked at her mess, and then looked back to her face. “Trust me, most people would rather keep you down,” I told her. That was when I finally turned around and walked away.
“Those people are what suck!” she yelled behind me.
I didn't turn around again, but kept walking with a small smile on my face. She picked up her mess by herself, and I left her there.
Something I didn't want to ever do again.
♥
The burns that covered my entire body were like a slap in the face to most people, as if I were hurting them by allowing myself to be seen. A restaurant