Burdensome scent

We walk together, no longer holding hands.
Passing familiar streets, the wall of silence that had grown between us ever since we entered the movie — now impenetrable.

We enter the street with walled-in-gardens where city lilacs release their sweet, wild perfume then bow down.

Heavy with rain, heavy of mind I break the wall even if it means being buried in mortar and bricks.

“Where are we going?”, I probe.

As if slapped, she recoils, but after a minute, she sighs.

“I’m leaving tonight, don’t make it harder, my friend.”

“Someone else?”

“Not your business; our beginning was good; I almost fell in love; but I see no future… together.”

With nothing to add, I stop; frozen; I watch her leaving, hesitant at first, then increasing her pace as she turns the corner.

Alone, I suffocate slowly in the burdensome scent of the lilacs.

Drowned by its burdensome scent – image created by Bing.

Today Kim hosts dVerse Prosery where we write prose that include a specific line of poetry in a piece of prose no longer than 144 words. I like to hit that mark exactly. The line(s) selected are:

‘…city lilacs
release their sweet, wild perfume
then bow down, heavy with rain.’

Taken from the poem ‘City Lilacs’, from Glad of These Times (Bloodaxe Books, 2007) by British writer Helen Dunmore.

In Sweden we do not get any lilacs until late May or early June, and to me it always brings back end-of-school memories which is all about ends and partings.

February 12, 2024

32 responses to “Burdensome scent

  1. That last line and your illustration…wow! I could see how someone could suffocate in that sweet sweet smell…never to face lilacs again for fear the memory of this person would come back – too painful! Well done!

  2. I could smell that burdensome scent, Björn, and feel the awkward atmosphere in your prosery. The phrase ‘no longer holding hands’ already spoke volumes, but coupled with the ‘wall of silence…now impenetrable’ really set the scene. I love the way you broke up the prompt lines.

  3. I like the metaphor you use in “heavy of mind I break the wall even if it means being buried in mortar and bricks.” People can be like walls. You do a great job of capturing the way a once fond memory can become an unpleasantry in our life. I do like the AI generated art, too.

  4. The phrase “city lilacs” in itself is a poem to me. No matter your intent, this is still beautiful and heady.

  5. Your snapshots pull together to having us caring for the jilted lover left in the clutches of lilacs. Very seamless working in of the given line!

  6. So many of the prose pieces have created an atmosphere of tension and unease. There’s something about the cloying smell of lilac that lends itself to that ambiguity.

  7. “…our beginning was good; I almost fell in love; but I see no future… together.”

    I could feel that regrettable sense of “almost…but” 😔.

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