I went where all small things go, to the woods. Under rocks and up trees I looked for others like me but found only the curious eyes of woodpeckers and mice. I kept away from sniffing dogs on the ground and lay stomach down on branches up high, cloaked in moss against the early morning chill.
When the day warmed up, I would sneak to the edge of the park and watch the round cheeked children play. I stopped shrinking. The children were so loud and hungry, brazen with wanting. I wondered how tall they would grow. The mothers all sighed and nodded.
I have stopped shrinking but I don’t grow. I live here among the trees, play on the swings at night, startle the squirrels as they climb onto my branches. The sun wakes me and I watch it rise with the birds. Chimneys smoke, buses screech, takeaway coffees are carried to places of work.
I shouldn’t have said sorry, I should’ve said thank you.
Kate Taylor is a writer from Devon. She is currently creating flash pieces as a distraction from trying to write an uplifting novella about the end of the world. This flash is her first public piece of work, and with luck, not her last.
No comments:
Post a Comment