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Madison Rye Progress 2024-07-02 17:27:21 -07:00
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<h1 id="2">2</h1>
<p>The Woman decided to go walking one day. Perhaps she was driven by restlessness. She had an errand to run, sure, but this day she decided to go out rather than perform this task at home. Perhaps she was bored! I do not know. </p>
<p>Either way, she was feeling good and she was feeling stable and she was feeling feline, so she found herself a nice set of slacks to wear over her legs, ones that looped up over the base of her tail in such a way that the same would be just as possible with a skunk&rsquo;s tail, and yet which would not fall down for those moments when she does not have a tail. </p>
<p>Either way, she was feeling good and she was feeling stable and she was feeling feline, so she found herself a nice set of slacks to wear over her legs, ones that looped up over the base of her tail in such a way that the same would be just as possible with a skunk&rsquo;s tail, and yet which would not fall down for those moments when she did not have a tail. </p>
<p>She found herself a nice shirt that felt good on the fur and which would not look too weird if she poofed out into a skunk. It was not her favorite shirt, I am sure, otherwise maybe she would wear it every day, but it was good enough. It had the word &lsquo;fiend&rsquo; scribbled across it in angular, glitchy graffiti, and The Woman is absolutely allowed to feel like a fiend some days.</p>
<p>Thus clothed, The Woman stood for a while in front of the mirror and admired herself. She felt good. She felt good, reader! It was not often that she felt more than just okay. Because even with all that I wrote about before, her life was not bad. It was an okay life. She liked this life in her own way. Her thoughts on unbecoming were not thoughts on suicide, I do not think.</p>
<p>She stood before the mirror and preened for a moment, adjusting the way her shirt sat and fluffing out her slacks to see how they might fit with a thicker coat. She combed her claws through her short fur to straighten out some mussed-up spots and ensured that her whiskers were all neat and in those rows that cats have that she always found fascinating.</p>
<p>The trip to the city was as it ever was. She said to herself a little prayer and opened the door to her closet. Taking a deep breath, she stepped through, and as she did so, she brushed her fingertips against the jamb as ever, and today it felt right enough that she stepped lively out onto the city streets, out where the leaves skittered anxiously around her footpaws in the faint February breeze.</p>
<p>Stuffing her paws into her pockets, she made her way down the street, where her entrance was located, to the main drag. The city was on the small end — more large town than full on city — and so it was still the type of place to have a main drag, a street built for cars that it does not actually have, with wide sidewalks paved in brick and a trolley that ran down the middle.</p>
<p>She stood before the mirror and primped for a moment, adjusting the way her shirt sat and fluffing out her slacks to see how they might fit with a thicker coat. She combed her claws through her short fur to straighten out some mussed-up spots and ensured that her whiskers were all neat and in those rows that cats have that she always found fascinating.</p>
<p>The trip to the city was as it ever was. She said to herself a little prayer and opened the door to her closet. Taking a deep breath, she stepped through, and as she did so, she brushed her fingertips against the jamb as ever, against some imagined <em>mezuzah,</em> and today it felt right enough that she stepped lively out onto the city streets, out where the leaves skittered anxiously around her footpaws in the faint February breeze.</p>
<p>Stuffing her paws into her pockets, she made her way down the street where her entrance was located to the main drag. The city was on the small end — more large town than full on city — and so it was still the type of place to have a main drag, a street built for cars that it does not actually have, with wide sidewalks paved in brick and a trolley that ran down the middle.</p>
<p>The Woman waited for the next trolley car to come and stepped aboard, tucking her tail down and around her leg as she held onto one of the railings — she never sat, and never could tell you why — to ride it for three stops. This was part of the ritual. Even when the car was busy and she was not feeling so good, there was a part of her that was happy that she got to stand on this trolley and hold onto this railing and feel this rattle-buzz of the wheels rolling along the track through her feet or paws. It was not even particularly pleasant for her, I think, but it <em>was</em> fulfilling.</p>
<p>She made it her three stops and stepped easily from the trolley to find herself before her usual coffee shop. There was so much comfort in routine sometimes. Not all routines are rituals, after all, sometimes there was just a coffee shop that you really like because it makes good mochas and always gives you extra whipped cream without being asked.</p>
<p>And so that was just the routine that she engaged with.</p>
<p>Once The Woman had her mocha with extra whip, once she had one of her usual tables over by the windows, once she had taken a seat, then at last she let her shoulders relax, let the tension drain out of the small of her back, let her tail curl around a leg of the chair so that she could simply exist out in public, just sit in her chair by the window and watch the life of the city roll by outside and listen to the rumble-chatter of the coffee shop and, in turn, be watched, be heard, be witnessed.</p>
<hr />
<p>The Woman loved a good mocha — even I love a good mocha! — and so she was plenty happy to go to the coffee shop every now and then to pick one up, to sit by the window and watch and listen to the world go by, but this was not why she is here today. This was her errand.</p>
<p>The Woman loved a good mocha — even I love a good mocha! — and so she was plenty happy to go to the coffee shop every now and then to pick one up, to sit by the window and watch and listen to the world go by, but this was not why she is here today. This was not her errand.</p>
<p>That day, The Woman was here because Her Friend had asked to meet up.</p>
<p>This was not how this usually went, you understand. Usually, The Woman was upset and asked for Her Friend to visit her, or perhaps she was out anyway and simply desired company on this errand or that, a friend for dinner or coffee or a walk along the shops to peruse the latest trends in fashion or oneirotecture or sensework. It had ever been the case that The Woman contacted Her Friend, and not the other way around.</p>
<p>Her Friend was always so stable, always so ready to speak and so ready to listen. Ey was the one who had long ago gotten in touch with her, with the whole of the tenth stanza, and started to talk to them and listen to what they had to say. Not the only one, no, but it was important to The Woman that Her Friend had sought her out, had cared enough to seek her out.</p>
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<p>Her Friend really did just want a friend, too, for the seventh stanza were all friends with each other, she was promised, and yet they had their own struggles. In Dreams was, she was ever promised, eager to help, eager to teach and to learn and to listen and to talk. There was advice to be given and the knowledge of psychology gleaned over however many hundreds of years now on offer — was it really nearly 300? There was</p>
<p>&ldquo;End Of Endings?&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Ah! My dear, my dear,&rdquo; The Woman said, pushing herself to her feet to bow. &ldquo;A pleasure, a pleasure. Please, sit, if you would like, or I am also happy to walk.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her Friend smiled faintly, bowed in turn, and pulled out the ratty chair across the table and fell into it heavily, eir own identical mocha set before em. &ldquo;How are you feeling, my dear? Well, I hope?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her Friend smiled faintly, bowed in turn, and pulled out the ratty chair across the table, curled her tail around, and fell into it heavily, eir own identical mocha set before em. &ldquo;How are you feeling, my dear? Well, I hope?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Returning to her own seat, The Woman nodded. &ldquo;Quite well, yes. It was a quiet and comfortable morning, and it was an easy trip here. The house was calm and the coffee shop is calm. How are you, though? You sounded&hellip;well, I suppose you sounded uncomfortable. You sounded like you were trying to be quiet.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;I was, yes.&rdquo; Ey laughed, looking sheepish. &ldquo;I do not know why. I was in a cone of silence. I suppose it must have been a mood thing.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;And how is your mood?&rdquo;</p>
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<p>The Woman nodded, lifted her drink for a sip, sighed. &ldquo;You have had mostly good things to say of them.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Mostly, yes.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;But not always.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Her Friend turned eir mug lazily from side to side on the tabletop, not yet drinking. &ldquo;Not always. There are times when we mesh quite well. Most times, even. There are times when we will go for morning runs and stay together in a group, but there are also times when we will lag behind, me and a few others. There are times when we will all eat together sitting around one table or having a picnic, talking about our days, and there are times when we will retreat to our own homes and eat by ourselves or with our partners.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Her Friend turned eir mug lazily from side to side on the tabletop, not yet drinking. &ldquo;Not always. There are times when we mesh quite well. Most times, even. There are times when we will go out for coffee in the morning and stay together in a group, but there are also times when we will lag behind, me and a few others. There are times when we will all eat together sitting around one table or having a picnic, talking about our days, and there are times when we will retreat to our own homes and eat by ourselves or with our partners.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman averted her eyes, nodded. &ldquo;As we do.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;As you and yours do, yes,&rdquo; Her Friend said cautiously.</p>
<p>The topic had been fraught for nearly sixty years now. Those meals were lovely, to be sure, as were the times when they would talk or sit in silence together, out there on the field, enjoying warmth and sun or perhaps the light of the moon.</p>
<p>It had not been all of them for sixty years, though. Not since Death Itself had died, her and I Do Not Know. Not since they had fallen into catatonia and then smiled, shrugged, and quit. Not five hours later, I Do Not Know had sighed comfortably, turned over in her bed, and then quit as well.</p>
<p>It had not been all of them for sixty years, though. Not since Death Itself had died, her and I Do Not Know. Not since Death Itself had fallen into catatonia and then smiled, shrugged, and quit. Not five hours later, I Do Not Know had sighed comfortably, turned over in her bed, and then quit as well.</p>
<p>Fifty-eight years since the last meal they had all shared together.</p>
<p>Even so, The Woman — her and her whole stanza — insisted for years that it was all of them who ate together, when the remainder of the tenth ate together. <em>All</em> of them, all together. They insisted on that, friends, just as they insisted on leaving two empty chairs at the table, two plates of food set before them.</p>
<p>With a deliberate motion of sharp-clawed paws, The Woman drew a definitive line across the table, defining an arc around her. With this, she blocked the topic off, reflected the thoughts of loss and trauma away from herself, out somewhere else. It was a practiced motion, smooth and careful, and one that Her Friend knew well.</p>
<p>Ey nodded, understanding, and continued. &ldquo;The reasons we might not eat with each other or that some of us may fall behind on our runs are varied, of course. There are long-standing shifts in the way the stanza works together, yes? It has been a long time since we have been so alike. Sometimes, however, it is a little thing. One of us will say something that rubs another the wrong way and it will take us time to work it out. We will write our letters or have our conversations and it will be fine in time.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Ey nodded, understanding, and continued. &ldquo;The reasons we might not eat with each other or that some of us may wander away on our outings are varied, of course. There are long-standing shifts in the way the stanza works together, yes? It has been a long time since we have been so alike. Sometimes, however, it is a little thing. One of us will say something that rubs another the wrong way and it will take us time to work it out. We will write our letters or have our conversations and it will be fine in time.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Is that what happened this time?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her Friend hesitated. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; ey said carefully. &ldquo;I said something to In Dreams, I said that I was feeling unwell, that my stress had been high and that I was worried I might be overflowing — or at least on the brink of such — but also that I was feeling particularly rough about the Attack. I was feeling grief and loss.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman&rsquo;s breath caught in her throat.</p>
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<p>We use breath for speaking, and even though I am not speaking to you right now, I am still breathing. I still feel the warmth of my breath against my paw as it brushes across the page with each line of text. We use breath for gasping, for sighing, for even snoring!</p>
<p>So when I tell you that The Woman&rsquo;s breath caught in her throat, you must imagine the way your breath might catch in your own throat when suddenly you hear something that causes a rising tide of emotions that takes precedence even over that, even over breathing. You must picture the way that you feel when, if you were to breathe, you fear there might be a whine of fear or a moan of terror — or even pleasure, because we are no less susceptible to that.</p>
<p>And here, now, The Woman was feeling most of all grief. She feared that, were she to let her breath out, it would be that whine of fear, that moan of terror, a wave of tears.</p>
<p>The tenth had left two empty chairs and two full plates at meals until three years prior.</p>
<p>The tenth had left two empty chairs and two full plates at meals until three years prior, until the Century Attack.</p>
<p>Now they left three.</p>
<p>Her Friend, either knowing or seeing this, averted eir eyes, casting eir gaze instead out to the street. &ldquo;I am sorry, my dear. I was indeed feeling grief and loss over Should We Forget. No Longer Myself as well, yes, and Beckoning and more, but the one I knew best was Should We Forget. I am sorry.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman let her breath out most carefully, not letting it shake, not letting her lip quiver. &ldquo;I understand, yes. You knew her as well.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Perhaps we can speak simply of the fallout.&rdquo;</p>
<p>She bowed. &ldquo;I would appreciate that, yes.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Of course, my dear,&rdquo; Her Friend said, smiling, nodding her acknowledgement. &ldquo;The fallout of this conversation with In Dreams was that she told me that perhaps I ought to schedule a session, either with her or In Memory, or, failing that, someone outside the clade.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Of course, my dear,&rdquo; Her Friend said, smiling, nodding eir acknowledgement. &ldquo;The fallout of this conversation with In Dreams was that she told me that perhaps I ought to schedule a session, either with her or In Memory, or, failing that, someone outside the clade.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Is that what you wound up doing?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Ey shook eir head. &ldquo;I did not need that, my dear. I did not need to be told to go to therapy. I did not want to schedule an appointment.&rdquo; Ey finally took a sip of eir mocha, but this seemed to be less about the coffee than an opportunity to gather eir wits. &ldquo;I just wanted a friend, honestly. I just wanted a hug — no, I understand, perhaps not your thing, but I must be earnest, yes? — but instead, I got told to find a way to <em>fix</em> this. Fix grief. Fix a very real pain.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Ey shook eir head. &ldquo;I did not need that, my dear. I did not need to be told to go to therapy. I did not want to schedule an appointment.&rdquo; Ey finally took a sip of eir mocha, but this seemed to be less about the coffee than an opportunity to gather eir wits. &ldquo;I just wanted a friend, honestly. I just wanted a hug — no, I understand, perhaps not your thing, but I must be earnest, yes? Instead, I got told to find a way to <em>fix</em> this. Fix grief. Fix a very real pain.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman&rsquo;s features softened and, steeling herself for the touch, she reached across the table to pat the back of Her Friend&rsquo;s paw. &ldquo;I understand, No Hesitation. Would that I could offer more. I am happy to be a friend, though; I have no interest in telling you to go to therapy.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; ey said, smiling once more. &ldquo;I trust you of all people in that. I know that you have mentioned — however kindly — in the past that you have worried that I am simply providing you with therapy on the sly, but I trust that you know that is not the nature of our friendship.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; ey said, smiling once more. &ldquo;I trust you of all people in that. I know that you have mentioned — however kindly — in the past that you have worried that I am simply providing you with therapy on the sly, but I trust that you know that such is not the nature of our friendship.&rdquo;</p>
<p>She nodded.</p>
<p>&ldquo;All I wanted was to be close to someone who would not do those things.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course. There are many memories bound up in all of this, but there is also joy, yes? Joy that we are still here? That is what I have been trying to focus on.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Oh? How so?&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;I do not know how healthy it is to treat those who are lost as if they are still there, but I also do not know that this is what I am doing. I do not even know if that is what the others are doing, yes? They might very well be, given the open seats on the table that we leave, given the conversations I hear at night from my cocladists. Many of them talk with Death Itself in quiet whispers while laying in bed. Many of them talk with RJ, still. I myself have talked with Michelle and Sasha, when I remember days long ago on her field, listening to her speak of being a dead woman walking when she was having bad days or gushing about Debarre on her good ones. Many of us speak to the dead.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;I do not know how healthy it is to treat those who are lost as if they are still there, but I also do not know that this is what I am doing. I do not even know if that is what the others are doing, yes? They might very well be, given the open seats on the table that we leave, given the conversations I hear at night from my cocladists. Rejoice speaks with Death Itself in quiet whispers while laying in bed. Many of them talk with RJ, still. I myself have talked with Michelle and Sasha, when I remember days long ago on her field, listening to her speak of being a dead woman walking when she was having bad days or gushing about Debarre on her good ones. Many of us speak to the dead.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her friend furrowed eir brow. &ldquo;Do you want my opinion as a friend, or do you want my opinion as a therapist?&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman shrugged.</p>
<p>&ldquo;As a therapist, I would say that there is such a thing as an unhealthy attachment style, that holding onto past traumas makes it awfully easy to reinflict them on oneself.&rdquo; Her expression shifted kind as she continued, &ldquo;As your friend, I would say that, if that helps, if there is, as you say, joy in it, then by all means, continue. If you can pray to the dead to feel joy, then perhaps you must.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;As a therapist, I would say that there is such a thing as an unhealthy attachment, that holding onto past traumas makes it awfully easy to reinflict them on oneself.&rdquo; Her expression shifted kind as she continued. &ldquo;As your friend, I would say that, if that helps, if there is, as you say, joy in it, then by all means, continue. If you can pray to the dead to feel joy, then perhaps you must.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; she said, buying herself a moment to think by sipping her mocha. Ah, but she was a cat, yes? A panther? Perhaps you can imagine this with lapping tongue, the way a cat&rsquo;s tongue curls back and scoops up drink, drawing it up into their mouth. Or perhaps she is the type who has leaned into another aesthetic, the type who can chew with her mouth closed. Idle distractions, even for your humble narrator. &ldquo;Then yes, there is joy in it. There is joy in those memories, is there not? One takes a moment of stillness&hellip;&rdquo;</p>
<p>After a long few seconds, Her Friend tilted eir head. &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Ah, a fleeting thought. One takes a moment of stillness and parks in that quiet joy, even if it is one of separation.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Is there joy in loss?&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;I do not know. Is there?&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her Friend laughed, shaking eir head and leaning back with mocha in hand. &ldquo;This is what I needed, my dear. I needed to speak with a friend. I needed chat about memories and watching the way you smile when you talk even these sad things, not sitting on some therapist&rsquo;s couch for the third time in as many weeks.&rdquo;</p>
<p>Her Friend laughed, shaking eir head and leaning back with mocha in hand. &ldquo;This is what I needed, my dear. I needed to speak with a friend. I needed chat about memories and watching the way you smile when you talk even about these sad things, not sitting on some therapist&rsquo;s couch for the third time in as many weeks.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The Woman preened. This, you see, is more than just a brushing out of imperfections, but a shift in attitude. When The Woman preened — when her whole clade preened, even! — she would sit up a little straighter with a subtle shimmy, lift her snout, close her eyes, bristle her whiskers, and smile a smile that was just south of smug. It is <em>very</em> cute, reader, I can assure you of that.</p>
<p>They fell then into comfortable chatter over just the small things: the coffee, the weather, the chairs and how they were <em>almost</em> comfortable, but not quite. They fell into warmth and companionship, and all the while, the woman set that fleeting thought she had had just off to the side, where she could keep track of it without it distracting.</p>
<p>Perhaps this unbecoming that her mind circled around was simply the utmost in stillness.</p>
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