
The chipped porcelain gnome in Mildred’s Garden had seen things. Indeed, more stuff than your average garden gnome and more than any gnome should rightfully witness in a seemingly quiet suburban cul-de-sac. Mildred, and her green-thumbed soul, had positioned him perfectly, a silent, stolid observer perched amongst the petunias, facing directly into number 14, the house of drama, specifically the dwelling of one Rex Hawthorne and his… shall we say, ‘companion’ of the moment, a rather lovely, if slightly overwrought, woman named Clara.
Rex, Gnomey (as Mildred affectionately – and slightly ironically considering his expression – called him) had observed, was a piece of work. A theatrical masterpiece, if the play were a particularly dark and twisted comedy staged in the living room of emotional wreckage. Gnomey had first caught wind of the Rex and Clara saga a few weeks back, the summer breeze carrying snippets of Clara’s tearful voice across the manicured lawns.
“…and then, my therapist said… it was incredibly difficult for me…” Clara had wailed, her words punctuated by dramatic sobs rivalling a Shakespearean tragedy. Gnomey, despite being inanimate clay, could practically feel the emotional weight Clara was laying down.
Rex, however, had responded with a performance of his own. Gnomey, strategically, had a clear view through the open patio doors. Rex had placed a hand – a very concerned hand – on Clara’s trembling shoulder. His brow furrowed, his eyes widened with theatrical empathy. He nodded, listened, and offered a tissue from a pristine, suspiciously unused box. “Oh, Clara, darling,” he’d murmured, his voice a soothing balm, “That sounds… devastating. Truly.”
Gnomey, in his silent wisdom, knew bullshit when he saw it bloom. And this, my friends, was a prize-winning bouquet. He’d seen that same “devastated” expression on Rex’s face when he’d “comforted” poor Brenda after discovering her prize-winning Labrador had a mild indigestion. Rex, it seemed, had a boundless capacity for faux empathy, a bottomless well of counterfeit concern.
The truth, as Gnomey suspected and later confirmed through snippets carried on the breeze – Rex’s phone conversations conducted loudly in the garden, presumably for maximum neighbourhood impact – was far less noble. “Honestly, Mark, it’s gold! The melodrama!” Rex had chuckled into his phone one sunny afternoon, oblivious to Gnomey’s silent scrutiny. “She’s laying it all out, trauma buffet, and I’m just gobbling it up. It’s better than Netflix!”
Gnomey would have put on a masterclass in ocular gymnastics if he could have rolled his eyes. He’d witnessed Rex’s ‘magic’ up close. It was, as the poem Mildred sometimes hummed described it, “Sleight of hand, smoke ‘n mirrors, manipulation.” Rex was a master illusionist of emotions, conjuring feelings in Clara – and probably himself, for dramatic effect – out of thin air and insecurity.
Clara, wearing her purple and green cotton socks, was smitten. Gnomey had seen the initial glow and the adoration in her eyes as Rex presented his carefully crafted “mask.” He was charming, attentive, and understanding. He listened – or at least, appeared to listen – to her deepest fears and vulnerabilities, nodding sagely as she confessed her anxieties about her career, weight, and questionable taste in reality TV. Rex absorbed it all, filing it away in his mental Rolodex of Clara’s insecurities, ready to weaponize them immediately.
“C’mon, babe, this is fate!” Rex had declared loud enough for Gnomey to hear over the rustling rose bushes one evening. Clara had questioned his sudden, extravagant declaration of love after only three weeks. Gnomey had to hand it to Rex; the audacity was breathtaking. He was marinating Clara in her vulnerabilities, seasoning her with declarations of destiny, and serving her a dish of pure, unadulterated manipulation.
The cracks, however, were starting to show. Gnomey had witnessed the shift in Clara’s demeanour. The initial sparkle dimmed, replaced by a furrowed brow and a hesitant air. She was starting to see the strings, the faint lines of manipulation beneath Rex’s smooth performance.
One particularly blustery Tuesday, the drama reached a new crescendo. Gnomey could hear raised voices from within number 14, carried on the wind that rattled his porcelain hat. “You’re doing it again, Rex!” Clara’s voice, sharp and strained, cut through the air. “You’re twisting my words! You’re making me feel like I’m crazy!”
Rex’s response was perfectly calibrated, a masterclass in gaslighting. “Clara, darling, what are you talking about?” Though still audible, his voice was now laced with wounded innocence, a masterful shift from lover to victim. “You’re just tired, you’re stressed. You’re not thinking clearly. Is this about your ex again? Darling, you’re starting to sound just like him. Don’t you think maybe…your mind’s just hazy?”
Gnomey almost choked on a stray ladybug. “Hazy?” That was rich coming from the king of obfuscation. Clara, predictably, faltered. Gnomey could practically see the self-doubt creeping in, the insidious tendrils of Rex’s gaslighting wrapping around her intuition. She was on a “blaming-me mission,” just as Rex intended, questioning her reality and sanity.
Rex, Gnomey knew, was baiting her, pushing her towards the edge, all for his twisted amusement. He wasn’t interested in empathy, in genuine connection. He was a puppeteer, and Clara was a fetching, if increasingly distressed, marionette. “Why pay for entertainment, when this is free?” Gnomey could almost hear Rex thinking, relishing the drama, the escalating conflict.
The arguments became more frequent, more heated. Gnomey observed Clara’s desperate attempts to seek confirmation, to fight for some semblance of truth in the swirling vortex of Rex’s manipulation. She wanted him to admit it, to acknowledge the game he was playing. But Rex, true to form, never confessed, never admitted, never conceded an inch of ground. He deflected, he denied, he doubled down on the gaslighting, pushing Clara to the brink, then, just as she teetered on the precipice of walking away, he’d pull her back in with a sudden surge of faux-affection, a carefully timed “I love you,” delivered with just the right amount of dramatic sincerity.
Mind games, Gnomey mused, were indeed Rex’s favorite sin. He was the Joker of this particular love story, and Clara, poor and bewildered, was being cast in the role of Harley, willingly or not. Gnomey, in his years of silent observation, had seen this play out before. The only way Clara would “win,” as the poem suggested, was to walk away. But Gnomey, being a realist, especially after witnessing Clara’s increasingly desperate attempts to salvage something tangible from this toxic farce, doubted she would. She was, Gnomey suspected, already too deeply invested in the “disguise” Rex had worn at the start, the charming, attentive facade that had lured her in. She was in love with a phantom, a carefully constructed illusion.
The poem’s final line echoed in Gnomey’s ceramic brain: “But you know I love you…” Gnomey snorted, a silent, gnome-like snort. Love? Rex didn’t know the meaning of the word. He loved the drama, the control, the twisted entertainment of it all. Love for Rex was just another prop in his elaborate, self-serving performance, another layer in the mask he wore, a mask that Clara, love her heart, seemed destined to keep trying to understand, even as it slowly, indeed, choked the life out of her spirit, right there under the watchful, utterly unsurprised, gaze of a chipped porcelain garden gnome.