Yellow Daffodils
by ChrisB
Posted: Tuesday, March 9, 2004 Word Count: 1398 Summary: This is my second story from a collection I am currently working on. Not sure if this one works or not so feedback appreciated. |
Yellow Daffodils
By Christopher John Nicol-Bowser
Little Jossie was seven years old to the day and to celebrate her birthday her family had
arranged a special afternoon picnic with three of her best friends. All the girls looked
incredibly alike: they all were tall and thin, with long legs if not a little gangly, oval round
faces covered in long light brown hair, but each one also had a subtle difference. Heidi had
freckles and wore glasses, Paula liked to wear her hair up in pig-tails, Emma’s hair was the
longest and the curliest, whilst Jossie’s hair was the longest and straightest.
They all sat intimately in the middle of Heidi’s parents’ huge garden, on a snug looking red
and white square wool blanket, happily chatting away to other and laughing as they played
games and dressed up dolls in ragged clothes and read each other stories from fairy tale
books, whilst eating small cut quarter ham salad sandwiches, big bowls of crisps
Caerphilly cheese, long sticks of celery and for drinks they had a large jug of freshly
squeezed orange squash which they all drunk in paper cups.
It was the most beautiful of spring days, just warm and dry enough to spend the first day
out in the garden, the blossom on the trees had an early bloom, the light tints of blue and
purple on the trees floated like angels, and the honey suckle wallowed in the air sweetly
combining with the freshly cut grass and little white daisy’s that looked so crisp and alive
that the garden seemed to breath the same fresh air as the little girls, as if they all
resonated in one whole unit, captured by a painters hand with oil paint on canvas. But the
one object that caught Jossie’s eye the most was the hundred’s and hundreds of bright
yellow daffodils that sprouted from every corner of the garden, and along the edges of the
main bank created a unity of yellow all around them. She felt they were magical and she
had an urge to get up and dance amongst them.
‘It’s such a glorious day to be outside girls,’ Emma said.
‘Yes I’m really enjoying myself,’ Heidi said.
‘Can you pass the juice Paula,’ Jossie asked.
‘Here we go, happy birthday Jossie,’ Paula replied.
They were loving every moment of the day, every second was a blessing, as the sun
beamed down glorious hot rays of heavenly sunshine through the trees and they could
all feel the glorious warmth of the sun on the tops of their heads. It was a perfect day.
Absolutely Perfect.
‘You know your mother is dead,’ Heidi said.
Suddenly the perfect day changed and vanished with those simple words. Words spoken
with as much ease as if she was asking Jossie what was her favourite colour. And now all
that was left was silence as it penetrated all the girls thoughts and movements. Each one of
the girls looked at Jossie, and waited for a reaction.
But the words cemented in Jossie’s head and a huge sense of confusion covered her
mind. A panic rose from somewhere deep inside her heart and filled her body with a
shiver. Panic that sent a bolt of lightening to her young and innocent heart.
‘No she’s not,’ she snapped back defensively.
‘She is, I heard my mum telling my father in the kitchen.’
‘She can’t be,’ she screamed.
Again Jossie was stopped in the empty silence, not knowing what to say next as more
streams of confusion ran over her mind. Silence penetrated again. Not able to think the
other girls stared at her intensely. But the damage had been done. She felt separated
from the others now. She was the odd one. She was different and they all knew it.
‘Are you OK Jossie?’Heidi asked.
But before she could say anything else, Josssie had already jumped to her feet and
ran to her home as quickly as her long bandy thin legs would carry her. She continued
to run down the path of her own home, breathing and panting heavily and the first
person she ran into was her grandfather and his brother who were talking quietly
outside the house. Both of them stood outside the front door to the house and were
both talking quietly to each other. Her grandfather was pointing to something in the
sky with his arm outstretched, which had now clouded over and had darkened.
‘Is my mum dead?’ she asked anxiously.
‘Yes,’ he said trying to hold back all the pain that was so clear to see on his face, but
which little Jossie did not understand.
The panic and confusion continued to rot away in her mind as she ran into the house
and into the living room, but there she was suddenly knocked still as if she had ran into
a brick wall ; the atmosphere that filled it so thick and tense with dark heavy feelings it
penetrated her very soul. The moderate sized living room was full of her family and close
relatives, covered in semi-darkness as the green velvet curtains were nearly fully closed,
excluding most of the daylight, everyone of them sat somewhere in the room crying like
Jossie had never seen anyone cry before. Some of them cried into empty space, some cried
into their handkerchiefs and some cried on each others shoulders. It was so loud, so noisy,
as the chaotic tears filled the room, the grey long faces grieved in pain and in misery,
heartache prevailed in every minute molecule of the room.
Little Jossie stood there in shock, frozen motionless by what she could see in front of her
young eyes, not knowing what to do or what to say. No one came to her, everyone
seemed to look at her, but then look through her as if she did not exist. No one knew what
to do and as she stood at the entrance to the door her fear just grew. She was so scared
and so petrified at what she could see her chest got tighter, her breathing became more
shallow, more quick and her innocent and fragile mind raced with new fearful thoughts.
What is happening...Is everything all right, is everything going to be OK. But still no one
approached to comfort her fears.
She began to feel a growing sense of isolation to all the bodies around her like she did
a few moments ago to her closest friends. She felt increasingly all alone and abandoned
and her spirit grew smaller and smaller. It shrivelled up like the skin of an ageing apple.
The juiciness and freshness sucked away by time as grey clouds and confused thoughts
rambled and rioted in her head. What was wrong with everyone…Why was everyone
acting so strange…Where was her father...Why wasn’t anyone talking to her...Where is
her mother now...Has she really gone forever...Is she going to be OK…Will she see her
again...Will she be able to talk to her.... She didn’t know the answer to any of these
questions, but she had so many of them and she wanted some answers.
But no answers came and she was left feeling even more confused, dazed and anxious.
Her safe and warm world has become shattered like a clear glass plane exploded into a
thousand pieces. She sat down in front of the television, switched it on and stared at the
screen blankly, the images on it’s surface did not matter. She didn’t want to be in this
world anymore. Every now and then she had the courage to look up and around the room
if only vacantly at all the sad and distant figures, and finally her eyes once again came to
rest and became transfixed on a bunch of bright translucent daffodils glowing away
in a tall thick glass vase that stood on the Welsh dressing. One large single daffodil in
particular caught her attention, as it seemed to have an inner glow ten times more than any
of the other daffodils. Jossie stared into its shades of yellow and green and slowly went
into her own trance, slowly she blocked out all the pain that surrounded her, wishing for
the beauty and love she could see in the flowers form. Soon the tragic event slowly faded
away in the distance and she hoped it would never return.
By Christopher John Nicol-Bowser
Little Jossie was seven years old to the day and to celebrate her birthday her family had
arranged a special afternoon picnic with three of her best friends. All the girls looked
incredibly alike: they all were tall and thin, with long legs if not a little gangly, oval round
faces covered in long light brown hair, but each one also had a subtle difference. Heidi had
freckles and wore glasses, Paula liked to wear her hair up in pig-tails, Emma’s hair was the
longest and the curliest, whilst Jossie’s hair was the longest and straightest.
They all sat intimately in the middle of Heidi’s parents’ huge garden, on a snug looking red
and white square wool blanket, happily chatting away to other and laughing as they played
games and dressed up dolls in ragged clothes and read each other stories from fairy tale
books, whilst eating small cut quarter ham salad sandwiches, big bowls of crisps
Caerphilly cheese, long sticks of celery and for drinks they had a large jug of freshly
squeezed orange squash which they all drunk in paper cups.
It was the most beautiful of spring days, just warm and dry enough to spend the first day
out in the garden, the blossom on the trees had an early bloom, the light tints of blue and
purple on the trees floated like angels, and the honey suckle wallowed in the air sweetly
combining with the freshly cut grass and little white daisy’s that looked so crisp and alive
that the garden seemed to breath the same fresh air as the little girls, as if they all
resonated in one whole unit, captured by a painters hand with oil paint on canvas. But the
one object that caught Jossie’s eye the most was the hundred’s and hundreds of bright
yellow daffodils that sprouted from every corner of the garden, and along the edges of the
main bank created a unity of yellow all around them. She felt they were magical and she
had an urge to get up and dance amongst them.
‘It’s such a glorious day to be outside girls,’ Emma said.
‘Yes I’m really enjoying myself,’ Heidi said.
‘Can you pass the juice Paula,’ Jossie asked.
‘Here we go, happy birthday Jossie,’ Paula replied.
They were loving every moment of the day, every second was a blessing, as the sun
beamed down glorious hot rays of heavenly sunshine through the trees and they could
all feel the glorious warmth of the sun on the tops of their heads. It was a perfect day.
Absolutely Perfect.
‘You know your mother is dead,’ Heidi said.
Suddenly the perfect day changed and vanished with those simple words. Words spoken
with as much ease as if she was asking Jossie what was her favourite colour. And now all
that was left was silence as it penetrated all the girls thoughts and movements. Each one of
the girls looked at Jossie, and waited for a reaction.
But the words cemented in Jossie’s head and a huge sense of confusion covered her
mind. A panic rose from somewhere deep inside her heart and filled her body with a
shiver. Panic that sent a bolt of lightening to her young and innocent heart.
‘No she’s not,’ she snapped back defensively.
‘She is, I heard my mum telling my father in the kitchen.’
‘She can’t be,’ she screamed.
Again Jossie was stopped in the empty silence, not knowing what to say next as more
streams of confusion ran over her mind. Silence penetrated again. Not able to think the
other girls stared at her intensely. But the damage had been done. She felt separated
from the others now. She was the odd one. She was different and they all knew it.
‘Are you OK Jossie?’Heidi asked.
But before she could say anything else, Josssie had already jumped to her feet and
ran to her home as quickly as her long bandy thin legs would carry her. She continued
to run down the path of her own home, breathing and panting heavily and the first
person she ran into was her grandfather and his brother who were talking quietly
outside the house. Both of them stood outside the front door to the house and were
both talking quietly to each other. Her grandfather was pointing to something in the
sky with his arm outstretched, which had now clouded over and had darkened.
‘Is my mum dead?’ she asked anxiously.
‘Yes,’ he said trying to hold back all the pain that was so clear to see on his face, but
which little Jossie did not understand.
The panic and confusion continued to rot away in her mind as she ran into the house
and into the living room, but there she was suddenly knocked still as if she had ran into
a brick wall ; the atmosphere that filled it so thick and tense with dark heavy feelings it
penetrated her very soul. The moderate sized living room was full of her family and close
relatives, covered in semi-darkness as the green velvet curtains were nearly fully closed,
excluding most of the daylight, everyone of them sat somewhere in the room crying like
Jossie had never seen anyone cry before. Some of them cried into empty space, some cried
into their handkerchiefs and some cried on each others shoulders. It was so loud, so noisy,
as the chaotic tears filled the room, the grey long faces grieved in pain and in misery,
heartache prevailed in every minute molecule of the room.
Little Jossie stood there in shock, frozen motionless by what she could see in front of her
young eyes, not knowing what to do or what to say. No one came to her, everyone
seemed to look at her, but then look through her as if she did not exist. No one knew what
to do and as she stood at the entrance to the door her fear just grew. She was so scared
and so petrified at what she could see her chest got tighter, her breathing became more
shallow, more quick and her innocent and fragile mind raced with new fearful thoughts.
What is happening...Is everything all right, is everything going to be OK. But still no one
approached to comfort her fears.
She began to feel a growing sense of isolation to all the bodies around her like she did
a few moments ago to her closest friends. She felt increasingly all alone and abandoned
and her spirit grew smaller and smaller. It shrivelled up like the skin of an ageing apple.
The juiciness and freshness sucked away by time as grey clouds and confused thoughts
rambled and rioted in her head. What was wrong with everyone…Why was everyone
acting so strange…Where was her father...Why wasn’t anyone talking to her...Where is
her mother now...Has she really gone forever...Is she going to be OK…Will she see her
again...Will she be able to talk to her.... She didn’t know the answer to any of these
questions, but she had so many of them and she wanted some answers.
But no answers came and she was left feeling even more confused, dazed and anxious.
Her safe and warm world has become shattered like a clear glass plane exploded into a
thousand pieces. She sat down in front of the television, switched it on and stared at the
screen blankly, the images on it’s surface did not matter. She didn’t want to be in this
world anymore. Every now and then she had the courage to look up and around the room
if only vacantly at all the sad and distant figures, and finally her eyes once again came to
rest and became transfixed on a bunch of bright translucent daffodils glowing away
in a tall thick glass vase that stood on the Welsh dressing. One large single daffodil in
particular caught her attention, as it seemed to have an inner glow ten times more than any
of the other daffodils. Jossie stared into its shades of yellow and green and slowly went
into her own trance, slowly she blocked out all the pain that surrounded her, wishing for
the beauty and love she could see in the flowers form. Soon the tragic event slowly faded
away in the distance and she hoped it would never return.