Sunday 28 December 2014

Chocaholic

This was the last time, she promised herself (and her father) as she wolfed down the large Hershey’s bar. A moan escaped her mouth as the chocolate melted on her tongue. Those who heard her were too used to it to be concerned. People jumped as the door suddenly slammed shut. Feet moved swiftly down the road, but a memory of the intoxicating taste lingered.
It was when the key turned in the lock that the craving hit. Squeezing her eyes shut, she desperately tried to recall what the book said on how to stop a chocolate addiction. When you’re craving it, eat something healthy instead. Making a beeline for the fruit basket, her fingers closed upon a spherical object, fuzzy under her fingers, and so unlike smooth, sticky Lindt chocolates. Hurriedly cramming it into her mouth, she willed the sourness to morph into creamy sweetness as she chomped down on the peach with urgency.
Heavy footsteps startled her out of her reverie. She looked up to see her father walk into the kitchen.
“Hello Salma.”
“Hello.” Out of habit, her hand wiped the corners of her mouth, only this time, there was no chocolate there.
“Glad to see that you’re eating something healthy for a change.”
His avoidance of naming the thing he so detested did not go unnoticed, but Salma replied with a simple “Yeah.”
They looked at each other for a minute, each searching for some conversation topic to bring up, before Salma scampered out of the room. The awkwardness chased her up the stairs and all the way to the room. A frame clattered to the ground when the door was slammed shut. As she bent down to pick it up, her thumb gently ran over the picture, pretending it was actually her mother’s straight hair she was twirling around her finger.
“Give me some words of wisdom, Mama. I know what you would say. But how can chocolate make it better, when chocolate is the problem?” The bed sank under her weight. The coolness of the metal frame seeped through her thin shirt as she hugged it to her chest. The wind whispered ghosts of past conversations:
“Once the sweetness fills you with energy, go for a run,” a honeyed voice said.
“But won’t a run just drain my energy?”
“Well then, I guess you don’t know the feeling of wind hitting your skin and whittling away the worries. And sweetie, if it’s raining, I’d be surprised if you came back with your forehead all creased up like that.”
Her mouth watered. Outside, the trees rustled. Hitting herself on the knee, she sat up, set the frame on the pillow, and was down the stairs and out of the door without disturbing her father, who sat in his usual spot on the couch with a cigarette dangling from his fingers. A slow jog built up to a race. The wind blew past and she tried to ignore the way it hissed ‘Cadbury’ and ‘Snickers’ as she pushed against it. By the time she decided to head home, the children were running back indoors. The streetlamps turned on one by one as she ran past. Cars rushed past, none sparing a glance to the lone pedestrian.
It was as though each day was being knitted together by an arthritis-ridden woman. Every hour was a test against her willpower, but the lengthening dinner conversations reminded her of the reason for this resolution. If her mother could see them, she would have smiled as she used to in the brief moments when the two of them got along. The smell of smoke even grew fainter with every day.
Three weeks from that day, her heart pounded in the last few minutes of class. Mrs. Selyse dropped the paper onto her desk.
“Good job,” she said. The number on the paper mocked her. If she stared at it long enough, maybe the 80 would morph into a 90. The bell cut off the chattering voices. Robotically, Salma stood up and walked out.
Three years ago, her father would have lashed out at her for not being the best. But in those days, she sought comfort in her mother. Since the fateful day when typhoid took her mother, her father would simply nod when she fearfully muttered her bad grades. There was no further acknowledgement of any sort. Instead, he continued to blow smoke rings at his wedding picture.
She was right in assuming that it was her resemblance to her mother that caused her father’s gaze to avert hers. Chocolate boxes in the fridge and cupboards were too sharp a reminder of his beloved wife (who was, after all, nicknamed the chocolate fiend). Without her mother to bridge the gap between the two people she loved most of all, they were thrown into isolated grief. But what brought Salma comfort simply brought her father pain. It really was her drug; she continuously needed her fill; and it upset her parent. She saw the disappointment in his face when he realized it was not his wife eating M&M’s in the kitchen, and she knew that he did not actually have to go get a hammer from the garage at that very moment.
Salma reached the school doors. Light drops of rain kissed her skin, gently caressing and assuring her. The cold air chilled the mixture of tears and rain on her face, but the relief was welcome. Legs started moving faster and faster until she found herself on her knees one block away from where she started. Without the start-up energy, her gangly legs could not carry her to comfort. A hand touched her shoulder.
“Is everything alright? Was it the test?” Rania was standing there looking concerned.
“Yeah. It’s…well…” Salma could not muster the strength to speak.
Rather than pushing her to speak, her friend pulled her up with ease and gave her bony shoulders a reassuring squeeze. Salma’s eyes grew wide like Maltesers, fixated on the dark skin of her friend’s arm. The colour burned. Leaning forward, she stuck her tongue out to taste the chocolate. It was salty, and it jerked back at the contact. Her head only dipped further, with her teeth sinking down, not allowing room for escape. A noise fought through the haze in her mind, but the protest only made her bite harder. Copper and iron ran over her teeth, and then she was shoved backwards.
“What the hell!”
Red ran down Rania’s arm, like strawberry filling dripping out of a bon-bon. As her gaze moved upwards, a horrified expression snapped Salma out of her delusion. Tripping as she stumbled backwards, she turned, ignored the call from behind her, and ran.
The energy was there. Drops of rain landed on her skin, filling the hollow of her shoulder blades. Her hair stuck to her face like melting chocolate. Nature joined her passion, tossing down buckets. People around her ran for shelter, but she only continued to run. Darkness settled in, and so did the wet chill. Streams gushed out of the sidewalk. She slipped and fell, a scream ringing through the thunderous night.

When she regained consciousness, she was sitting with a blanket wrapped around. A hand offered her a hot mug. Chocolate fumes rose up, fogging all thought. A tentative first sip, then she gulped down the liquid, not noticing how it burned her throat. The second cup was swallowed with the same haste. In her impatience, the contents of the third spilled onto the floor. Anxiously her gaze swept around the room, but the man who had offered her the sinful sweetness was gone. The room was empty. Liquid swirled lazily on the floor, taunting and tempting her. A part of her should have realized that quitting was not so easy. Chocolate was her cigarette. In stress and despair and sadness it pulled her out. Her eyes lingered on the door. It remained still. The pent up longing had her on her hands and knees. Hair and chocolate blended into one as she bent over. And this was how her father found her, clinging desperately to the addiction she failed to break.

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