Shweta is our host for the Saturday Six Word Challenge – #118.
This weekโs prompt word is โbeginningsโ. Here is my 6 word story.
Tag: Endings
ON BROKEN WINGS

Thereโs a feeling you get when a relationship is about to end. It sort of sneaks up on you like ivy climbing up a tree trunk. You see it starting but itโs nothing terribly worrisome; then it slowly starts working its way up the trunk until it overtakes the tree. Itโs got a strangle-hold on that poor tree, suffocating it. It doesnโt matter if itโs a mighty oak or a frail mimosa; the ivy will win out every time.
Thatโs the feeling I now had for Jeremy and I donโt know why. I just knew it was time to break things off. That was clear; what wasnโt clear was how I was going to tell him.
Itโs not as though we started off like a couple of teenagers on a hormone rush. Ours was a gradual connection much like our disconnection. We had chemistry. We could make each other laugh. We liked the same music, the same food, the same movies. We could talk at length or enjoy a quiet, lazy Sunday afternoon. We had incredible sex and a lot of it.
Jeremy gave me a braided love knot bracelet; I accepted it because it was pretty and didnโt feel as permanent as a ring.
We talked about moving in together but it never happened. Now Iโm glad we didnโt; that would have made things so much harder. It was good to come and go as we pleased; now I found we were doing that less and less. I donโt believe it was deliberate; we just started drifting apart. Everything gradually slowed down and cooled off. I realized at some point I had finally exhaled and I was no longer suffocating.
We spent a cool Spring afternoon sitting on a bench at the beach. Watching the waves rolling in and falling back, I knew the time had come. Quietly I told Jeremy what I was feeling and he slowly nodded in agreement. I think he was glad the pressure was off him. I started to remove my bracelet but Jeremy refused to take it back.
I slowly walked away and took the long route home through the park. It had begun to drizzle. I stared down at the pavement as I walked. Just then I came upon a dead bird at my feet. I stood there staring at the poor little finch; he must have fallen out of his nest. I took a few tissues from my pocket, wrapped them around the bird and carefully picked him up; he was still warm, his tiny body limp.
I carried the lifeless bird home and retrieved a small spade from my gardening tools on the back porch. It began raining a little heavier as I dug a deep hole beneath the tidy row of boxwoods; there I buried the bird. Before filling his grave with dirt, I took off Jeremyโs bracelet and placed it across the broken wings.
My face was wet; I couldnโt tell if it was the rain or my tears.
NAR ยฉ 2022