Malon Edwards: Rainbows and Unicorns (Fiction)
Trust me, I’m here.
I wish you could see me, too. But like I told you before; this is
my super power.
You’re not crazy. And neither am I. I’m not just a voice in your
head. I exist. I’m real. I’ve touched you, remember?
You were my first kiss. You were my first time. It wasn’t your
imagination. You weren’t hallucinating. It happened to me, too. I remember it. I
dream about it.
When I’m alone and I’m not thinking about never having the chance
to play shortstop as an Arizona Wildcat, I think about you—about us—and I smile
to myself.
I’m alone a lot.
It bothers me that you lost your scholarship offer to the
University of Miami. I remember you’ve wanted to play tail there since you were
a little boy. That was the first shy-secret you ever shared with me.
I’m sorry you’re here. I’m sorry they believe you’re crazy. But
life isn't all rainbows and unicorns for me, either.
I didn't ask for this. I don’t know how to undo this. I don’t want
to be like this. Coach Lagesse didn't tell us in health class our hormones
could go all Children of the Atom on us.
Sometimes, my family—my mom and dad, even!—wonder if I’m just a
mass hallucination.
I hear them talking about it in bed at night. I can’t help crying
when they do. I try to keep it in, but this isn't something you cry quiet
about.
It freaks them out. They turn on the lights and change the subject
when they hear me.
I’m tired of crying. I’m tired of being alone. I’m tired of my
parents not knowing if they really have a daughter. But I don’t know what to
do.
So until I figure it out, get used to me being your invisible
girlfriend.
Malon Edwards was born and
raised on the South Side of Chicago, but now lives in the Greater Toronto area.
Much of his early writing can be considered literary fiction, but these days he
writes mostly speculative literature. Find out more about Malon, and his
writing, at eastofmars.blogspot.com.