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Call Me The Soul of Your Heart

There was no room for silence

By Wendy GeersPublished about a year ago 4 min read
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Call Me The Soul of Your Heart
Photo by Farhad Ibrahimzade on Unsplash

Mr. Michael Fagan went to the dining room to eat, and Mrs. Lucy Fagan was waiting around the corner. She had been thinking about getting him to call her “the soul of his heart.”

On reaching the dining room, Mr. Fagan sat on a low stool by the wooden table. “Wait for me,” said Mrs. Fagan as she came around from the corner.

When both were seated, almost side by side, Lucy looked into his eyes of Michael and said, “In preparing this meal, I washed my hands and stayed in the kitchen until it cooked. Truly, it is one of my best meals.”

After digesting the words that accompanied the meal, Michael opened his eyes wide, blinked and rolled them around, and quickly settled them down again as if nothing had happened.

A deep breath went in and out of his lungs. He would have sat up and declared satiation if he weren’t hungry. However, he was hungry, and he wanted to get through the soup in a hurry. So with his right hand, he spooned some soup into his mouth.

From close observation, Lucy noticed that Michael was enjoying the soup, so it was the right time to tell him. So she leaned close and whispered in his ear, “From now onward, I want you to call me ‘the soul of your heart.’”

Nobody would expect him to reply while he had a mouth full of soup, Mike thought. So instead, he hoped to use the brief opportunity when his teeth grind the dry fish to figure out the following response.

To encourage him to stop thinking about it and pronounce her “the soul of his heart,” Mrs. Fagan snuck round to Mr. Fagan’s back and gave him a little bite on his right ear. “Stinging black ant !” cried Mr. Fagan, and out from his mouth came a bubble of chewed stockfish, bitter leaf, and crayfish.

Ignoring the little bite on his right ear — after all, nothing had happened to the left ear, the one he listened with — Mike looked down to scoop up another spoonful of soup, but Lucy had removed the bowl of the good bitter leaf containing stockfish and crayfish.

Michael rubbed his aching right ear and said, “Why did you remove the bowl of soup?”

“Call me the soul of your heart if you want the soup made with my pristine washed hands, which I prepared for you, my darling.”

Thinking it over, Michael said, “I give you all my love.”

“For whom are you saving your soul?” Lucy asked as she brought back the bowl of soup.

“For me,” replied Michael.

“Selfish,” said Lucy, and she took back the bowl of soup from Michael.

Quiet again, Michael regretted he had opened his mouth. Thinking and having the conversation in silence was better for him.

“Well, it is not all bad,” he said. His earache where Lucy had nibbled him was all but gone, and his mind settled reasonably. Nevertheless, he began to see the benefit he would have over Lucy if he were to declare her soul of his heart.

However, the title would have to come with a caveat. Everything in life comes with a condition.

She would have to defend the label every time; if not, he would withdraw it immediately. On that decision, Mr. Fagan’s heart began to warm up to the idea. If the title meant so much to Lucy, a threat of withdrawing it would make her behave the way he wanted.

A few seconds or so later, Michael had another thought. Many men scratch the top of their heads when thinking, but Mr. Fagan had a habit of rubbing his nostril instead.

Looking at him, Mrs. Fagan knew what Mr. Fagan was thinking. She wished she could get into his head, not to read his thoughts but to twist them the right way.

The idea that he was thinking about her proposal infuriated Mrs. Fagan. She wanted to curse him but decided against doing so because it might get in the way of how Mr. Fagan viewed her. So both of them waited, and the soup grew cold.

Michael was taking too long, and Lucy felt that if she were to empty the entire bowl of soup on his head or at least a part of it, perhaps it would make him think faster. Her eyes fell on the long curved spoon, still in the pot, she had used to stir the soup.

“Declare her the sole holder of your soul, and get on with the soup,” said Mr. Fagan to himself. What surprised Michael was how his brain functioned better now that the taste of the soup and hunger had faded.

He suddenly felt like a man who could examine every decision he made, just like his father, whom he loved and respected.

“What would they do?” Michael queried to himself. “How would they handle a situation where hunger and soul intersected?” Hunger for what, he derided himself. The desire for a bowl of bitter leaf soup mixed with dry fish, crayfish, and Jamaican pepper? Self-deprecation seemed to have woken him from slumber. His mind began to come together like a pile of dirt gradually swept into a corner.

As Mrs. Fagan watched, she saw a stubborn hesitation in Mr. Fagan. “Why the delay?” she said to Mr. Fagan. “Did you not like the soup I made with washed hands when I was fully awake?”

Since she did not respond, Mrs. Fagan went around behind Mr. Fagan. While Michael expected another punishment, Lucy leaned close and gave him a tender kiss on the aching ear. As the kiss worked its magic, Mr. Fagan relaxed and groped for parts of the same body that had delivered it.

“No,” said Mrs. Fagan, “call me the soul of his heart.” Mr. Fagan’s hands dropped to his sides as he expected another painful nibble. “Hope it won’t be on my listening ear,” he thought.

~~~~~~~~~~

Thank you for reading to the end

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About the Creator

Wendy Geers

Nice to meet fellow writers and readers!

I mostly write from broken places and reach into the darkness of life’s roads.

I try to encourage, inspire, and raise awareness with my stories.

Topics: Mental health, psychology & many aspects of life.

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