This Surely Is a Dream
Suburbia, 1998

1:00
The scent of rain hangs heavy in the air. Catlike, shivering, you slip through the door wearing your shyness as makeup, rosy blotches blooming atop damp skin.
Newly seventeen, you are but a fragment of who you will become and, in tandem, more whole than you will be hereafter.
You don't know this yet.
You don't know him yet.
0:55
There she was, in platform double suede
A popular song plays in the background, its refrain of candied sex creeping about your neck like ivy, dissonant chords cinching tight. There's a hint of perversion to it, a vague disquiet, and you think of how your mother, ever offended, would object. But then, Mom is not here.
0:50
There she was, like disco lemonade
The house is cozy, if generic, a complement to the Anywhere USA street on which it sits. He's leaning against a nearby wall, ubiquitous party cup in hand, ball cap yanked down over eyes of, as you'll discover, hazel-gold. You find yourself staring, and before you can look away, he takes notice.
With practiced motion, he tilts his brim upward, completing the visual circuit.
0:45
A crowd lingers, their faces rendered featureless as he shifts into artful, lucid relief. Your blush, already aflame, only deepens when he grins at you, warmth spreading with the ease of honey on a summer morning.
His attention is steady, alchemical, the intensity bold and kind in equal measure; a target men twice his age cannot hit, let alone with such aplomb.
0:40
Rat-a-tat-tat, rat-a-tat-tat
The downpour lashes at every windowpane, its metallic rhythm keeping time with your pulse. When the stranger steps forward, self-assured in a manner owing to youth, you recognize why nothing, perhaps no one, has been enough before this sodden April night.
Oblivious to the clichés—and they abound—the moment strikes you as bespoke; threads woven across centuries and planes, fate culminating in this very meet-cute.
You've been discovered, made Real as velveteen once banished to a dusty corner. It feels intoxicating.
It feels like having found your way home in the dark.
0:35
"Hi," you mumble, spellbound. He asks your name, and you rush to reply, flustered to learn of his low, calming voice, far removed from those in your daily orbit.
His tone is all but reverent when he repeats your answer, this given title that has come to define you; so close is he that you can taste the liquor's sting on his breath.
This word, your word, takes the shape of a full-bodied plea in his mouth: See me, too. Reciprocate.
A crack in his armor, and you like him the better for it.
Then, aloud, "That's pretty. I'm James."
0:30
Concern clouds his expression. "You must be freezing. Want me to get a towel?"
"I'm good," you say, embarrassed that he clocked the slight tremble. As you ponder what comes next, his fingers reach out and brush a skein of dripping hair, heat producing a charge as they skim your collarbone.
Your gaze once more seeks his and, upon higher recognition, space-time collapses. With a blink, you are twenty-three and cocooned in white, the gown's Arthurian sash helping to anchor your lightness.
He awaits you in finery, smile unchanged from that inaugural spring when the violets came early.
You know joy.
0:25
Though he misses the birth—pressing work issues–the rest is smooth sailing. She is hours old to your twenty-six years and, for the second occasion in this existence, your defenses have failed you.
The infant peers from beneath upturned lids, irises bright and shining, her yawn a crooked, precious O. Where you expect only innocence to reside, there is a font of native wisdom.
You are mine, and I am yours, she telegraphs, tiny fist swallowed neatly by your palm. Humbled, you realize no love could be as pure—as absolute—and something needful within goes silent.
You know peace.
0:20
Spilt whiskey coats the rug, bits of glass forever enmeshed in the ruined fibers. Your saving grace is that she is gone, visiting relatives, thus spared the pain of bearing witness.
At thirty-four, concealer will no longer suffice, and the stripes covering your throat betray themselves in daylight, inky stains frayed yellow at the edges. He promises, again, that this will be the last of it, but the war in your gut rages on.
You know torment.
0:15
Wax and vanilla permeate the room. Sighing, you blow out the lone candle on a makeshift cake, its contents leaden and well past expiry.
"Happy fiftieth to me," you whisper, glancing around as if the apartment might take pity and respond. For the ninth consecutive year, it would seem he's forgotten, or maybe the bar just holds that much appeal.
You know you must leave.
0:10
You are sixty-eight, and though you stayed, he has flown. The car's back seat is cavernous, slick, its onyx interior like being consumed alongside Jonah. The tissue in your grasp has reverted to a watery pulp, and mascara bleeds into lines freshly unearthed.
For whom these tears fall, exactly, has been lost to mist and fog. Your girl, long since grown and saddled with her own regrets, claims she couldn't make it. She sent wildflowers in her stead, their petals garish against a Victorian-grey afternoon.
Eyes shut, you picture him in the hat he wore that first evening, the journey from strong and green to eternal black a sea of confusion.
You know nothing.
0:05
Sliding your key in the lock, you curse each mistake that has delivered you here, assuming more agency than is realistic. A caution, you muse, should be standard in every woman's epitaph: Never set loose your daughters unseen.
At this, you wonder how your headstone will read.
Wife-to-James. Mother-of-Treasured-Child. Here She Lies, Unidentified.
You know defeat.
0:00
Mama, this surely is a dream
"Wanna take a walk? Since you're already drenched . . . hard to hear over the music."
His offer commands your focus, and the future dissolves with haste, abandoning you to the present.
"Sure," you agree, undaunted by weather and premonition in turn.
He twists the knob, inviting an unseasonable chill. The scent of rain hangs heavy in the air. Catlike, shivering, you are both dead and alive, still able to run, but it's of no use.
At seventeen, you know everything.
About the Creator
CJ Miller
Author • Dog mom • Castaway
"Think of this: that the writer wrote alone, and the reader read alone, and they were alone with each other."
- A.S. Byatt
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insights
Excellent storytelling
Original narrative & well developed characters
Compelling and original writing
Creative use of language & vocab
Easy to read and follow
Well-structured & engaging content
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions
On-point and relevant
Writing reflected the title & theme
Masterful proofreading
Zero grammar & spelling mistakes
Eye opening
Niche topic & fresh perspectives




Comments (35)
Fantastic ♦️♦️♦️I subscribed to you please add too 💙♦️🙏
⚡❤️⚡
Beautiful work ... makes me glad I enjoy prowling Vocal pages!
That was f*cking excellent. Well deserved first prize, congrats!
Congratulations 👏🏻🎉👏🏻🎉👏🏻🎉
Such a journey, of heart and love, and of losses stacked atop losses. And of potential. Stunning storytelling. <3
Superbly written! And really encapsulates what it feels to be young and the dangers that lurk with one wrong choice. Well deserved first place!
Hey back to say congrats on your first place victory.
Congratulations on the win and choice of song!
This made me read slow. That's rare for me. Perfect choice for a winning entry! Congratulations!!
What a journey this one minute takes us on as readers. Compelling story. Excellent writing. Congratulations on a well-deserved win. 🌅
Wow! This might be the best short story I’ve ever read! I literally have chills, sorrow, and a bazillion undefined emotions buzzing through me - speechless- so wonderful- congratulations!!! 👏🏻👏🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
Wow! Great story and well deserved win… What a pity that at ‘ At seventeen, you know everything.’🥺… the places little choices take us step by step 😳.
Back to say congrats on your win!<3
This is unbelievably brilliant - unquestionably a first place-worthy piece!! Congratulations, and thank you for sharing your artistry. This piece is heavy- the way anxious premonitions paint the inevitable, each vision so beautifully and movingly described - really amazing work, CJ!
Intriguing, insightful, sad, and brilliant! Well-deserved first place! Congratulations
Congratulations on the first place win! This story was incredible. I loved the unique structure and the vivid imagery throughout. Each slice of time stood on its own, but together they formed a cohesive whole. I can definitely see why this one took first place. Bravo!
Wooohooooo congratulations on your win! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊
wow, perfect👌👌👌
Such a well written story. Reminds me that so much in life is predestined and we're all walking well trodden paths.
Lovely read and journey through the subject's eyes and thoughts. Congrats on your win!
Congrats on the win. Incredible story.
Well done and congratulations on a well written piece that hits home
Phenomenal writing! This took me on a quite unexpected journey, with an ending as wide open as the beginning.
Congrats on your Top Story!