One morning, Mr. Chagreen left and never came back.
He picked himself up from the corner of my room, skipped out
the window into a freedom I had never had. I stare at the window and watch the
wind blow my drab curtains. Wonder if freedom felt like the happy swinging of
the purple patterned fabric.
I didn’t understand why I was never to leave this room. They
said I was mentally unstable, caused by traumatic experiences. They said that I
could put others in harm’s way. But then again, they said I was of no harm too
anybody but myself. I didn’t understand people. They say one thing all the time
and mean another. They don’t make sense to me. But I guess that’s what makes me
different. I guess it’s what makes me ‘mentally unstable’.
Mr. Chagreen was my invisible friend. He made me laugh when
they made everything seem sad. Once, we went sun-searching. It’s a term he
created for chasing the sunset, trying to catch the shimmery orange rays of the
sun as it fell away from earth to give way to the moon. We’d rush outside and
sit on grass, stretch our palms out to the sky and try and catch as many rays
as possible before the sun said goodbye. When he caught a ray, Mr. Chagreen
always looked beautiful. The orange glow set his brown face in a shimmery halo,
and a thought always flashed at that moment: God sent him to me.
But they say Mr. Chagreen is bad. They say he takes away my
real friends and he is only a figment of my imagination. They say he scares
people away from me and makes me talk to myself when real people want to talk
to me. So they drove him away from me.
For days, I was lonely. I wanted to call him back but I dared not. Because they
said it was part of my ‘treatment.’ So I hung alone in parks, played in the
grass by myself and went sun-searching alone, because you see, the ‘real’
people still talked to me strange. They still stared at me funny and whispered
behind my back.
Mr. Chagreen first came to me that night when the pain
began. All I could hear was screaming voices. Mummy and Daddy were angry again.
Mummy was crying but she was screaming. Daddy looked like the evil purple
monster in my bedtime story. I crawled to the corner of my room and closed my
ears and hummed that song mummy taught me to hum. But they were shouting so
loud I did not hear myself. I started to
cry. I wished they would stop. Then a thought flashed in my mind: Tell them to
stop.
I run out of my room to the hallway, looking up the
staircase at them and just when I filled my lungs to scream ‘stop,’ Daddy hit
mummy hard. She fell and rolled down the stairs. I looked down at mummy lying
next to my left big toe. She was no longer shouting. She was no longer crying.
She was staring at a place between my legs and her red juice started to creep
under my toes. It was warm. It was sticky. I called her but she didn’t respond.
Then daddy swooped me into his arms. Everything went dark after.
But Mr. Chagreen pinched my cheeks and kissed me awake. He
told me he would be my best friend. He told me we would play lots of games
together. And we would grow up together. He was with me when the men in blue
came and took daddy away. He was with me when the fat ‘institootional’ lady
came to take me away too. He was with me when the doctor with thick glasses
told me I’m ‘unstable’. He was with me when the nightmares came
and mummy kept staring at somebody else with her red juice wetting my hands and
feet and my favorite purple dress. I screamed her name but she simply looked
away. Mr. Chagreen was with me when I woke to find the red juice had become urine
all over my sheets and clothes. He cried with me when the fat ‘institootional’
lady gave me a ‘good spanking’ for wetting my bed.
He was with me when
the other children refused to play with me. He made my tongue form words when I
was so scared to talk, I stuttered. He made me talk of the green leaves, orange
sunlight, rainbows and unicorns when my mouth wanted to scream that mummy’s red juice was on my feet. Mr. Chagreen braided my hair and put flowers in it,
though it made the other children shout, “She’s putting dead flowers in her
hair again!”And when we went sun-searching and the magic orange rays fell on
our faces, that hole in my chest that made it difficult for me to breathe
vanished. That urge to scream ‘stop’ melted and mummy’s smile came back,
daddy’s laughter caressed my cheeks again. And we were rolling around in my bed
again, tickling each other and laughing and telling stories. Like the story of
the handsome prince who looked like Daddy and would sweep me off my feet.
But the doctor with the thick glasses and moustache like a
toothbrush said Mr. Chagreen was bad and had to go away. So I pushed him away.
But he still held on to my hand.
Then one day, he went and never came back. And the
nightmares came back, so I began to cut myself to see mummy’s red juice again.