Stranger than Fiction
I slyly peer a 30-something woman from across the room.
A sibylline beauty, her features are mysterious, ominous. Her profoundly green-hazel eyes are icey, almost jaded.
She scans a cell phone screen superficially. After a pause, navigates her index finger around the tiny display. The rough, callused digit delicately twirls like a rudimentary ballet.
A smoldering cigarette barely dangles from her bottom lip, almost completely vertical. She exhales thickly through nostrils; shrouded by a veil of smoke.
Who is this portentious prophetess?
Vaguely familiar to me; profile a shadowy archetype from amorphous dreams. Maybe a moonlit figure I casually noted in passing. Perhaps, we were acquainted in a past life. What an annoying conundrum.
This female creature fascinates me.
I want to ask her name, her interests. I ponder her potential hopes for the future, aspirations, epiphanies. Could she contribute wisdom or pertinent information? A flurry of potentials and possibilities circumnavigate my skull.
Pandora's open box.
I pinch my thigh to stop the sensory overload. I clamp my eyes shut; slowly re-open them to slits.
She is staring, stoically, back at me.
It seems as though my perception plays a rather cruel trick. Chest tight, breath shallow, I realize. The stranger I struggle to recognize is my own reflected image.
Who am I? Where has the time gone? What have I become? Where will I go from here?
My immediate reply: deafening silence.