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Challenge of the Month XII
The Finale. You’re living on the streets and want it to end. Write about your last moments, why you’re over it, and how you’re about to go out. Fiction or non-fiction, poetry or Prose. $100 purse to our favorite entry. Outstanding entries will be shared with our publishing partners.
Herald42
• 46 reads

Spoon

Once upon a time, I was fat. I had been a fat little boy who turned into a fat little man who turned into a barely walking bestial glob that barely stood at five-foot and a half who couldn’t put down a spoon. I weighed thirty-eight stone when I was just twenty-five years old. Nowadays you could scoop me up with an arm and carry me like a bulimic suitcase made of loose skin and dirt. I blamed my late wife. She was a feeder, and in the five years I was with her, I had gained eighteen stone and an equal amount of hatred for her. She would hit me when I wouldn’t eat, force-feed me when I still wouldn’t, and reward me with fantastical feasts when I had gained a suitable amount of weight. I peaked at thirty-eight stone, then lost half a stone when I became ill. To make a long story short, she left me with nothing but agoraphobia and thoughts of suicide.

A month later, the house was repossessed. Imagine my fear: agoraphobic and just waiting for the day where I became homeless, for the day where I would be forced to enter the outside world I had become to fear and loath even more than the house with my own blood spilt up the walls.

And yet, I was now thirty-five years old and had lost a tremendous amount of weight. Granted, I had been homeless for ten years, living off what I found in bins, was given by kind strangers few in number, and my own wits. I had come so far. But now, I was done. I was tired of being spat on, glared at, beaten, having pennies pelted at me, and I was tired of having nothing and being completely unable to do anything about it.

It must have been when I saw my ex-wife. She looked right at me, right into my eyes, peering into my soul and then she looked away. Barely containing her disgust. Didn’t even recognise me.

I stole a pad and a pen from some shop, having ran faster than I had ever ran in my life, and I wrote down my final thoughts. I pocketed the pad, chucked the pen, and sat beside a tree in a secluded part of town. Then, I tied a shoelace tight around my saggy, left bicep and watched as my skin turned an even paler shade of white than my starvation had already made me. I pulled the skin on my arm taut and plunged the needle into a revealed vein, transmitting what I’d hoped was a lethal dose of heroin into my bloodstream. I was already addicted. I remember once I saw a spoon as something very different; something good and wholesome. Then spoons became something I loathed living with my ex-wife. Now, my spoon had been very much needed until today.

I remember, between the days where I was beaten and force fed and screamed at, that I would sit there and think that if there was just one thing I could do right now, it would have been to take a needle, fill it with heroin, and ram it into my wife’s throat and watch as she overdosed. If only that were a memory. But she was the only thing missing in the scenario I’d dreamed of, and so I supposed I may as well just go out on my terms. To go out with a feeling of what I’d hoped would be euphoria in a world where I don’t remember ever being graced with such feeling. I would die soon.

Five-foot and a half, eight stone, bald from malnutrition, and looking like someone had collected the skin off a dozen corpses and glued them onto me. My last moments would be spent sat in silent euphoria as I slowly became completely uncomprehending of anything. I would smile, just happy that I would soon no longer be able to think.

I died as I had lived: with a spoon in my hand.

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