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Joseph Aprile
A Cold and Icy Bridge

Winston was bundled up against the cold February night. An icy wind blew mercilessly across the bridge over the turbulent Monongahela River. He looked down into river, whose movement was highlighted by a full winter moon. The roar of the current transfixed his attention. Inescapable feelings of emptiness and longing reverberated in his brain and seemed to resonate with the power and directness of the river.

He looked deeply into his own life. He saw little that he could hold on to. He had no friends, not even mere acquaintances. His mother had died many years ago. His memories of her were of a woman with an ugliness of heart and mean spirited by temperament. She had died alone from the slow devastating effects of alcohol. She had abused him severely as a child. He could still remember how often he had heard her cold voice remind him that he was always unwanted and nothing but a burden to her. She often abused him, physically hitting him for no apparent reason.

His father was still alive, but he had neither seen him nor heard from him in years. He was a reclusive man, who never did understand how to care for another human being. He abandoned his son not out of hatred or vindictiveness, but rather an inability to share.

Winston felt the mighty river pull him toward the center of its fury. At first he wanted to resist this force, to turn it away from him. He wanted to break free and get on with his life. He wanted to find the inspiration to discover a new path of redemption. Most of all, he wanted to transcend his loneliness, and find another person, to, at long last, discover human intimacy.

In this way, standing on that bridge, he found himself at war between two opposing forces: one that wanted him to make the plunge into total darkness and oblivion, the other urging him to abandon his unhappiness and find a renewed beginning. And so it was that Winston was suspended between two entirely different realities.

Many times he decided to despair of everything and throw himself off that bridge, but just as many times he vacillated and held himself back. These moments, in which all reality was suspended, seemed like an eternity. Nothing existed outside of the conflict that now raged inside his brain. He was somehow strangely suspended between the stars above, which represented optimism, and the turbulent river below, which promised uncompromising darkness.

Suddenly, the spell was broken by the clamor of feet upon the wooden planking of the bridge. The sound of footsteps reverberated against the superstructure of the bridge. The noise seemed to bounce inside of Winston's head. His head began to ache, and his face contorted from the pain. As the steps came nearer, he turned his eyes towards the intruder. The woman's figure was shrouded in a heavy raincoat. She too was occupied with internal worries, and was distracted from the ordinary reality about her. She momentarily glanced up from her thoughts, and was startled by the apparition of Winston, whose eyes were alive with the fury of his inner thoughts. She was filled with terror. She did not wish to show fear, but she couldn't help it. She began to run away. He called after her. She stopped momentarily. As he looked into her eyes he saw in her the epitome of all his hopes and fleeting optimism. His life seemed to hang on that moment. She abruptly turned her back to him and disappeared into the night.


In the early evening of the next day, the flashing lights of a police car were bouncing off the murky waters of the river. Scuba divers were surfacing with the drowned body of a young man.


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