"So tell me girl, do you believe in blinking; do you believe I just saw your future; do you believe I grasped the fist of what awaits you?" He said as he straightened his mantle and perfected his pose against the concrete wall. There was no knowing what the cane was for, but at least he wasn't placing any weight on it. "No, I don't believe. No such magic vision exists, nor would you of all people possess it. What you are trying to feed me is some form of manipulation. What do you want from telling me this?" This was just another day for her.
He'd never been too fond of the drama, even if the tendency was for such to emerge. Now it all was suddenly a battle, no longer just a piece of narration - story telling. If he wanted to carry out what he was after, it would demand an amount of working around. But today he'd just pull a long shot.
"So you're afraid." He spoke as if it were a logical continuation to where the conversation had dropped off, like there was no pause at all.
"Afraid of what? I'm afraid of a lot of things."
"Of course you are. You're afraid of most insects, loud noises, strangers in the night, your sister falling into a well. But they aren't as relevant."
"How did you-"
"Even that's not important. I've been here a long time, as you should acknowledge. I know things, I feel things, I see things you don't see."
"Then what do you know, and don't start me on that 'I can see your future' crap again?"
"I know hope burdens you."
"Then I guess it's easiest not to have hope at all, easy?"
"I know hope is what you most desperately have sought a long time, nevertheless."
"That's not very logical, is it?"
"Well who would have guessed you part roads with logics." [sic]
"But I'm not here for this."
"No, you're not. There's no far enough for you." His comment sounded indifferent, which sparked her rapid, intensely defensive reply.
"Absurd for you to be telling me this. I know you: you're the one who hasn't moved from this haze for the longest time. You must come out only when you're really bored. Playing tricks on people." He raised his brows in an expression of narrow empathetic worry, and replied with a calm voice:
"But you're the one who can't get far enough to forget that they need hope. Until you can bend to admitting that you actually need to believe in some absurd concept of hope, for yourself, you're stranded on this endless odyssey."
"Oh, and here comes the future again."
"What I see is that believing in a future seems repulsive to you."
"There exists no future, ergo you can't see one."
"Then what's your calendar for?"
"Knowing what to do on my todays."
"Then why do you have tomorrows?"
"Because my today doesn't stop when I want it to. It's dynamic, see?"
She looked into her calendar and saw every day scheduled full with the phrases "Dismiss yesterday, decline tomorrow" in her own handwriting.
"Now that was a nice trick. Why'd I need the hope in the first place?"
"Why do you think it burdens you so much?"
"I'd hate to believe in something good happening and be turned down."
"Now you're cruising. You can do better."
"Because I actually think I care. And that's something I might not be ready to admit to myself."
"So where would that leave us?"