-DAWN-
Rating: PG-13, Daniel POV
Disclaimer: Don't own them, never will, the quote from Darren
belongs to John Mayer's "3 x 5," which is a great song that
everyone should check out. I kid you not. I can't stop listening to
this guy. Imitation is the highest form of compliment.
Note: This is just a weird little fic that I've wanted to write for a
while. I've got a whole series of "crazy fic" saved up, and I'm not
sure what to do with any of it.
"So what so I've got a smile on
But it's hiding the quiet superstitions in my head
Don't believe me
When I say I've got it down"
-John Mayer, "Why Georgia"
-DAWN-
I have another letter from Darren today.
They always come in the same white envelope in his loopy
handwriting, which I always thought looked funny next to my own
spidery slants. He dots his i's.
They're heavy.
I always know Darren's envelopes because of the way they feel.
I ignore the letter carefully, keeping it in just the corner of my
sights as I diligently prepare my coffee. I have a ritual with these
letters. They cannot be immediately opened. First, the coffee.
Every envelope has a different return address, one that I can't write
back to, because by the time the letter reaches me in Australia, he's
already gone. Already gone to another three cities and is well on
his way to a fifth interview.
I have a collection of letters from Darren. This is the second part
of my ritual. Each letter must be retrieved and reread, folded and
unfolded along their breaking creases. Hidden inside each letter is a
photograph. In the beginning, the pictures were of Darren. Now,
the camera is his eye. He sends home to me a blink of his touring
life.
We promised to write each other every week. No phone calls.
Things get weird on the phone.
He writes. I don't.
Finally, I stare vacantly down at this letter, the sun warming the
back of my hand. His solo album came out this week, and I wasn't
expecting anything from him. We certainly never had time for
writing or mailing or time to breathe when we did interviews for
Savage Garden. But here it is, waiting for my letter opener. The
envelope is a cream color this time, which bothers me more than
any idiosyncrasy should.
I stare at the return address. New York City, Darren's favorite. I
smile, picturing him wandering up and down Fifth Avenue,
salivating at the shop windows.
"We were going to write every week."
I look up, startled to hear the voice. Darren leans easily in the
doorframe which connects my living room and my hallway. He is
wearing modern, thickly framed glasses which he does not need to
see. But no one is in the room, and I shake my head. I hear him
more often now. He's getting harder to avoid.
"I write every week. Why don't you?"
"There's no return address," I reply, pushing the envelope away
from me with the tips of my fingers. "Not one I can use."
"Have you ever tried?" Suddenly he is leaning against the glass
door with his arms crossed. Sitting on my sofa. Lounging in the
kitchen. Sprawled across my bed. I shake my head, pressing a
palm to my closed eyes. This Darren I see does not exist.
"Go away," I command the confident Darren that waltzes over to
my coffee table and sits down across from me. The glasses are
gone and his hair has grown five inches and lightened.
I've always had these partners. There's a team of five or six of
them, and sometimes they come together, but usually it's only one
at a time. I have a different one for each hard spot in my life, and it
helps me to feel not so alone.
I'm not crazy. I know I'm not, because I get along just fine with
these apparitions, and I know they're not there. I used them to
keep me company when I was so lonely on tours. They're all
images from my past, people I've wanted to be. I tried to tell
Darren about them once, and the closest he could relate was that he
used to imagine he was singing to Bono.
They've all left now that the tours are over. But Darren likes to
float around whenever I get bored.
"Open it," Darren cajoles from across the table.
"I'll open it when I'm ready," I snap at him, and when I look again
he has disappeared. I never told my psychologist about these
people who I pretend talk to me. I never told my shrink about
being visited by Neo from The Matrix, who makes me feel brave, or
Edge from U2, who takes away my stage fright right before a show,
or my brother Jon, who would appear in my hotel room late at
night when I missed my family so much. And I never told about
Darren coming to visit after all the others left.
I have imaginary friends.
The letter is staring up at me with all its wrong colors. I glance up
for a second, and Darren is back, watching the letter as intently as I.
He meets my eyes and prompts me with a look that says, "Well?"
looking down at the table again.
The pictures he sends me are laid out in front of me
chronologically. After the first five of him waving and smiling
cheekily, they gradually turn into skyline shots. Sunrise. Sunrise.
Sunrise. The most beautiful glowing orb of rising fire against the
buildings. He takes them from his hotel balcony, and each shot has
the date and time meticulously recorded on the back.
I pick up the letter. It feels wrong. I slit it open immediately, and
pull out its innards brusquely, setting the envelope in my lap.
"A postcard?" Darren and I say in unison, and I feel vaguely
cheated out of the New York sunrise. It's a picture of the rising
sun on the Manhattan skyline. "Welcome to New York City!" is
printed across the bottom of the card. A postcard inside an
envelope. I flip it over to the other side and find his loopy words
written diagonally across the rectangular space:
"What does it say?" Phantom Darren perks up, and I read it out
loud for the benefit of us both:
"It says
'You should have seen that sunrise
With your own eyes
It brought me back to life
Youll be with me next time I go outside
No more 3x5's.'"
"What the hell does that mean?" I grumble, flipping the card over
again to see if anything was printed on the front that I had missed.
There was no other print or information from Darren that I could
see. Flustered, I stood, and the envelope fell off my lap. I glared
down at it and saw something had fallen out.
A plane ticket.
I stooped and lifted the ticket out of the envelope. One way to
Laguardia, New York City airport. A smile broke out on my face,
etching away months of anger.
Phantom Darren silently vanished.
.end.