Kalliope 2015 | Page 111

Katey Lehman Creative Writing Award (Fiction) The Most Real Thing by Samantha Mitchell Sylvie looked like a girl who loved horses. Long brown hair in a single braid down her back, wide-tackle shoulders, faded denim overalls. She scrubbed the blood off her hands in the cracked sink of the unisex bathroom. The warm water burned. Outside, the tractor-trailer waited under bright fluorescent lights that buzzed like drones. She ripped the last paper towel from the dangling dispenser and caught her ring finger against its jagged edge. There was a lot of blood. If Daryl and Ben could see her now, they wouldn’t speak. She avoided the mirror because she didn’t want to see what she already knew—her face sagging, eyes defined by sharp shadows; her skin pallid as sun-bleached hay. The thought chilled her to the bone, like dipping into Brown’s Pond at midnight, the cold water inching slowly up. There was nothing so unforgivable as the light in a truck stop’s bathroom, nothing so unnerving as catching your own eye in its splotched mirror, gaunt and sad and flecked with something else’s blood. Huge semis rumbled to stops near the gas pumps. Doors slammed shut as drivers clambered down, stretching their legs in the perpetual dance of the long-road trucker. She ran her tongue between the gap in her front teeth as someone jiggled the bathroom’s handle, rapped sharply, and backed off. She scrubbed harder, squeezing her eyes shut. Tiny worms of nervousness wriggled in her belly. She clicked off the light and stood there in the settling gloom, listening to the toilet tank gurgle, breathing deep the cloistered smell of urine and Dial soap, feeling her heart chirrup like a caught moth against the walls of her chest. Brown’s Pond loomed dark and dull in her mind’s eye and she wondered what she’d do even as, deep in her gut, she knew. 111