He always asked for secret toast. His bedside table stacked with books, the curtains always flung wide open and the windows dangling on the edges of falling off. Surges of winter air when the months were cold and gusts of fresh earthy breeze in spring. In the summer hot air pregnant with the scent of the roses outside and the apple trees burdened with their scarlet load. Tangy and sweet.
Secret toast, melted butter, the thinnest layer of strawberry preserves. Preferably with a cup of tea. Cocoa when he was smaller. Becky would bring it upstairs to him. After he was tucked in bed. After the lights were turned off. After he had brushed his teeth. He would hear the familiar creak of the stairs down the hallway. The squeeze of the floorboard just outside his bedroom door. Secret toast and hot cocoa.
‘Now eat up and go straight to sleep,’ Becky would say, leaving him with it.
She wouldn’t sit and talk to him, or play a game of chess. He never stopped pleading. By the light of the moon, he sat alone in his bedroom eating his secret toast and sipping his warm hot cocoa. Sometimes the stars would twinkle through the large windows of his childhood bedroom. Sometimes the stars would twinkle through the dormer window of his adult attic. Studio attic. Stacks of books everywhere, no shelves to put them in. Stacks of books neatly put away in shelves in his childhood, probably by Becky.
Secret toast at 12am, 1am, 2am, three.
Secret toast with butter and the thinnest layer of the cheapest jam he could find at the local corner shop. Cup of tea with a splash of milk and a tablespoon of sugar. Sweet and strong, like arms guiding him through the tough moments of it all.
The loneliness of it.
But the comfort in its familiarity.

Beautiful writing, as always, my friend. I love it when you dive into a bit of creative prose. You’re a wonderful writer.
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Thank you Diana, for always being so wonderfully kind and encouraging. ❤
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❤
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That last sentence hits me right in the heart right now. I usually steer clear of carbs beacause of how they impact my breathing, but today? I ordered pasta from the place my kids love, because it makes me feel like they’re here. I find such comfort in its familiarity, and reading this in your words as I eat pasta I would not usually eat. Thank you. ❤️
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I am so glad you said this! I hope that pasta brought you much comfort ❤
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There’s comfort in this writing too. Isn’t it amazing what seemingly little things bring us comfort?
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It really is, the comfort of familiarity, and the emotions we connect to things is pretty amazing. I think it’s some of what gives humanity its magnificent resilience.
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I think you are right.
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