I always wondered why most animals cannot see colours. Why should colours be reserved only for humans? Perhaps, I thought, if smells make our life more palatable and music gives voice to the unspoken, then colours are our guardians against the prosaic. It may be that colour is our last refuge in the face of mortality. We die, yes, but not in a grey world. We die with gardenias and mother's walnut cake and Chopin's revolutionary opus 10 and Carmina Burana. We die wearing a patch of blue sky. We die with a lock of hair in our pocket, chestnut brown, given to us by someone we once loved. It almost does not matter then...
Golden is the first light that we see, when coming out of mother. Golden is the sun, now and forever. Golden is the first kiss. Golden is a friend's smile, now and forever. Golden are our dreams. Golden are the oceans, now and forever. Golden is the first flower in spring. Golden are my memories, now and forever.
In the old days, people used to call me Golden D. It is a funny story really. This is how it goes...
One day, M asked me to prepare myself very carefully. I washed my hair, dried it and put it up in a bun, with a few golden strands bobbing up and down around my face as I walked. I have this strange way of walking, or so they tell me. Up and down I go on my high heels, a bit unsteady. I put on a golden dress. It was pleated and sported a low cleavage. It was very impressive, because I had got the dress was one size too small. I wore golden sandals on my feet and a golden chain with the letter D around my neck. I always wear that, so as not to forget who I am.
M was very pleased with me and said I looked beautiful and elegant. "You are Golden D," he said, "and you are mine."
That evening we drove through the streets for a long time, on our way to a location in the countryside. We finally reached our destination, a secluded area in Halkidiki, near the sea. We parked the car outside the gate and entered the garden on foot. It was a lovely garden, with lots of trees and flower beds and huge palm trees. A few lanterns here and there lit the place minimally. A high stone wall hid us from any curious passers-by, though I could not imagine that anyone would be walking around there at that time of night.
It was a large detached house made of stone. There were lots of lights on inside and I could see people silhouetted through the curtains. There was loud music playing. It was heavy metal music, which I do not like at all. M uses it on me sometimes to confuse me. I hardly ever lose my self-control any more. I have somehow learned how to preserve my composure, even through great hardship. This makes things a bit difficult when M wants me to surrender in his hands. He says he likes to see me lose it. Not for any other reason, but for the way I manage to pick myself up afterwards. A woman in a thousand pieces, that's what he called it. He thinks it is a kind of art and I a living art object.
We knocked on the massive wooden door. A man in his forties appeared at the threshold. He was handsome, a bit on the heavy side, with long black hair.