by Bacopa Literary Review 2021 Fiction contributor Elizabeth Christopher
I started writing "Dream Catcher" a couple of months into the pandemic. We had been nestled at home together for weeks--my three kids, my husband, and I. My husband soon returned to work outside the house, but I never did. Rather, my office became a refinished room in the attic, where I wrote copy for a technology company during the day and worked at my fiction before sunrise and late at night.
The
story was about a woman older than I am. Her house was an empty nest,
unlike mine. Her children no longer "fluttered around these rooms" like
mine still do. Yet, alone in my attic space, I could feel her loss, her
grief for her grown children who had flown off to faraway places, and I
imagined the regret she might feel for those times she resented them,
when they were small and "their presence felt heavy."
They were always climbing into my lap pulling at my arms. The air in these rooms was thick with their wanting. It was like gravity.
The
guilt from her belief that she drove them away weighed on this woman, as
did the guilt of killing the mice whose feces she found in her muffin
tins, "like some miniature game of Mancala." But she would not make that
mistake again. She'd protect those "small downy bodies huddled in a
thatch of leaves and insulation" within her walls, those mice whose
teeth made "sunbursts" in her cereal bag, and that bird that crashed
into her window like "a tennis ball's thwack."
It's no wonder that birds flew into many of the pieces published in the 2021 edition of Bacopa Literary Review as the editors noted in their foreword. The pandemic sent us indoors, leaving us to look out at a smaller, more intimate world from our windows. What I saw, and I guess what many others did too, were birds--birds persisting in their nest building, in their singing, in their fluttering--day after day, season after season. How their small, nearly weightless forms unsteadied me and filled me with hope, just like stories do.
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Elizabeth Christopher is a freelance writer living in Melrose, MA. Her stories and essays have been published in HuffPost, The Writer, Obelus Journal, and elsewhere. See more at Elizabeth Christopher's website.