Sonnet 7
January 13, 2008 at 7:23 pm (Poetry, Sonnet, Sonnet Cycle, Writing) (crying, father, friendship, parents)
You said that we had wisdom fit to choose
our path; you would not block our chosen way.
Now you declare I’m something you must lose,
a cancerous spot that must be cleansed away.
By your command, she must tell me goodbye.
If all your prayers are answered, I’ll be gone.
You are a holy man with eyes aimed high,
but eyes will not keep you from being wrong.
She cries to me. Hot tears scald hands like flame,
an angel’s testament of twisted creed.
Her dread is born of you. She wants a name
to call upon; a friend is what she needs.
If that is what you’d take away from her,
I fear that darker dealings will occur.
Dear Diary – Chapter 6
August 8, 2007 at 4:47 pm (Novel, Prose, Writing) (crying, family, friendship, relationship, school)
She got the next bunch of flowers that Friday. Five. I knew because she had them in her hand when she approached me after school.
“Hey! Alex!” she called. I turned and saw her walk-running toward me.
“Ashley!” I said, a bit puzzled. I was surprised to see her there. I had just stayed after to retake an algebra test I failed, and the halls were nearly empty. I had been tightening my scarf to prepare for the frigid outdoor air that awaited me and my long walk home. “What’s up?”
She reached me. “Hey, are you doing anything today? With like Chloe or anybody?”
“Uh… no, it’s just me today,” I told her. I motioned to the door, beyond which a light snow was falling. “I got a two-mile walk in this to look forward to. That’s about it.”
A strange thing was happening. Ashley, whose state had been steadily declining for the past few months, was, all of a sudden, smiling and somewhat bubbly. Like she used to be, before the Ender incident. I could still see something in her eyes that didn’t quite fit, but I could see she was trying hard to get better, and it was actually showing. She wasn’t so pale. She’d put on a little makeup, done her hair. I remembered what she had told me about Jace being a jerk to her, and how Chloe told me that they’d broken up. Maybe that was the reason for the return of her upbeat attitude?
“Really?” she asked. “So do I! My ride left a while ago, right after school got out. I was getting some help with Engish.”
“Yeah, I was taking that awful algebra test,” I explained.
“So… do you mind if I walk with you?”
Be still, my heart.
“Uh… sure, yeah. That’d be great!”
So we pushed through the doors and into the cold. Ashley was wearing a black coat and matching boots, and I just had my usual striped long-sleeve and scarf. I was used to the cold at this point. I looked up at the sky and sprinkling snow. It was one of those peaceful December days, a couple weeks before Christmas, where you can feel the holiday spirit coming on. The air seemed still and quiet. It was actually pretty romantic. I looked over at Ashley, her shoulders hunched up and her breath coming out in puffs. She was adorable when she was happy.
“So,” she said, wasting no time, “I’m sorry about my phone call the other day.”
It took me a moment to remember, but when I did, I said, “Oh, don’t worry about it.” I was curious as to why it had happened, but I didn’t want to ask, in case it was something too personal.
But I didn’t have to. “That was the day I broke up with my boyfriend.”
“Yeah, Jace Valentine, right?”
She nodded. “Yeah.” A shadow played across her face, but she smiled it off. “I guess I just wanted somebody to talk to, you know? And then when you actually picked up, I froze, I didn’t know what to say.”
“Why did you call me?” I asked tenderly.
We crossed the street.
“Well…” she hesitated. “Lately all of my friends have been ignoring me. I don’t really know why. Probably has to do with Jace somehow.” She sighed. “Besides, they’re all those types of girls who care more about appearances and hair and stuff, rather than people. I mean, I’m sure I’m guilty of that too, probably more than most people, but I’m still not proud of it.”
“Yeah,” I said, just to let her know I was listening. Not much else to say.
“But you’re not really like that,” she said, looking at me and smiling. My heartbeat quickened. “Even when I was a wreck, and even though we didn’t really know each other, you stuck by me more than everyone else. I guess I just wanted to say thank you.”
I blushed and watch my feet plow through the snow. “Thanks…”
We walked in silence for a few moments, and then she spoke up again. “You seem like a really, really nice person. It seems weird that we’ve never really talked or anything before this year.”
I smiled back. “You seem cool too, and nice, and… stuff. Yeah.”
She giggled. “I guess it’s kinda hard to get to know people when you don’t really have any classes together, right?”
“Yeah,” I agreed. “Makes sense.”
“But hey,” she suggested, touching my arm. I shivered, and not from the cold. “Do you want to come over to my house and watch a movie or something? We have this incredible popcorn, it’s even better than the theatre’s.”
Okay, reality check time. Was this actually happening to me? Here I was, walking home with Ashley, the girl I’d had a crush on since school started in August, and so far she’d thanked me for “being there for her” when really I was just trying to figure myself out, called me “really, really nice,” and now she wanted me to come over? What had I done to deserve all of this?
I grinned, wider than I remember doing for a while. It made me feel a little self-conscious, but I couldn’t help it. “Sure, I’d love to! You mean like, today?”
She shrugged. “Sure, why not? We can even get some homework done or something if you wanted.”
I laughed. “Yeah, but you’re way smarter than me. I’m so far behind you.”
“Well, then maybe I can help you, so you won’t have to retake the next algebra test.” She winked at me.
I kept waiting to wake up, but it never happened.
*
Ashley’s house was huge. I kind of expected that, from the way she dressed. You can just tell these things sometimes. But she was cool about it. After the grand tour, we started making the incredible popcorn in her designer kitchen in her designer popcorn popper. All black and stainless steel, of course. That was when I asked about her family situation.
“I live with my grandma,” she explained. “She’s… about eighty-five, I think. Old. And deaf.”
“Do you have any brothers or sisters?” I asked.
“Well, I have five older brothers, but they’re all at least ten years older than me and they’ve moved away. Now it’s just me and Grandma.”
“Wow,” I said. “So basically, you have this whole house to yourself?”
She thought about it. “Yeah, basically.” She laughed at the face I made. “It’s not really as great as it sounds. You can have all the nice things in the world but it doesn’t make you happy.”
“Hm,” was all I could think of to say. It was true, after all.
“And my brothers hate coming here, mostly because of Grandma,” she explained, as the popcorn began jumping. “She’s kind of hard to handle, and she was never close with any of us grandkids, even before she practically went deaf.
“This whole place is my dad’s fortune,” she continued, motioning up at the vaulted ceilings. “He was a really talented surgeon, before he and Mom died. The people at the hospital called him the Miracle Man.”
She got a distant, sad look in her eyes again. I knew the conversation was headed onto thin ice. I considered changing the subject, but wondered if it would be rude. She was telling me all of this for a reason, I thought. So gently, I asked, “How did it happen?”
“Car crash,” she said casually. “Nothing too exciting, just some drunk driver one New Years’ Eve. We were coming home from the big celebration and this jerk didn’t stop at a red light. He was going at least forty. It was over pretty quickly.”
“We?” I asked, amazed. “You were in the car too?”
She nodded. “I was eleven. I was hurt pretty badly. It took me a long time to heal. I still get pains and stuff every once in a while. But Mom and Dad… it was instant for them. The worst part is,” she choked back emotion, “the drunks? They lived, every one of them. They didn’t even get put in jail. I don’t know how it happened.”
She was crying now. I stood up and hugged her. It felt natural and good, like two puzzle pieces fitting together, and I knew I was doing the right thing. She grabbed onto me too, and held me tightly, crying into my shoulder. I felt myself tearing up too. I couldn’t think of anything to say that would help. I wasn’t sure if anything would. “I’m sorry” was all I wanted to say, but it didn’t seem like enough. So, I just kept holding her and letting her cry on me.
After a minute, she stepped back, her face now red and wet. “Jace would always tell me to stop crying. He told me I was being weak. I guess I am.”
“No,” I said quietly, lightly touching her arm. “It’s not weak. You’re not weak. The fact that you healed and are still going to school and living a normal life is proof that you’re strong.” Her eyes met mine. They were so bright and beautiful, even tainted by tears. “What’s difficult for some people might not be for others, but if it’s a big deal for you, then it doesn’t matter what other people might say or think. What matters is how you feel about it.”
Her eyes filled again. I worried that I’d said something wrong, and wanted to apologize. She came forward and wrapped her arms around my waist again, sobbing. I softly ran my hand up and down her back. “Thank you so much…” she said, her voice broken and muffled by my shirt.
I smiled quietly and told her, “Any time.” And I meant it.
*
Chloe’s team lost an important match the next Monday. It was a home game, and Ashley and I stayed to watch and cheer her on. Unfortunately, the other team managed to get the upper hand early in the game, and the referees were making bad calls left and right. I wouldn’t have known if it weren’t for the mass of angry fans booing and calling things out to them. Not very nice things. Our Reeds High Raptors lost the game, and now had no chance at the championship.
So I understood why Chloe was looking quite dejected the following day at lunch. She was even eating something normal – three cheese nachos. The cheeses were varieties I had never heard of before, and they smelled repulsive, but it was nachos just the same.
Ashley was sitting with us. She seemed very grateful to be doing so, too. Now, instead of poking her food or ignoring it, she was eating. A lot. More than me. She actually finished my fries when I decided I couldn’t eat any more. She was also talking. She could talk quite a bit once she got going.
And, might I say, the Friday before and now Monday and Tuesday were possibly the best days of my life. Something had changed between Ashley and I that day at her house, something I was definitely happy about. Now she smiled at me all the time, and instead of occasionally waving like she used to, she would stop and talk, tell me about her grandma, or her classes, or anything, really. She never seemed to run out of things to talk about. And for me, that was great. I had little to say, ever. Just listening to her was good enough for me. I felt so lucky.
I was engrossed in a worst-date story involving pine trees when I glanced at Chloe. She was looking down at her nachos, as if she’d suddenly lost her invincible appetite. “What’s wrong, Chloe?” I asked her.
She shrugged, without looking up. “It’s nothing. Not a big deal.”
This was odd. She was never sad. “Those nachos not weird enough today?”
My joke elicited a fraction of a smile, but that was all. “It’s not the nachos.”
Ashley stopped telling her story and joined in on our conversation. “What is it?”
“Is it about the game yesterday?” I asked.
“It’s…”
“Ashley.”
She looked up. A boy, a fresh-looking student body officer whose name I could never remember, had approached our table. In his hand, he held four white flowers. He handed them to her. “I was told to give these to you.”
She took them, looking a bit mystified. “Who are they from?”
He shrugged and held up his hands as if to repel responsibility. “No clue. The office told me to deliver them.”
“And they didn’t say who they were from?” I pressed, just as confused as Ashley. “There wasn’t a card or anything?”
He shook his head. “Nope. Whoever dropped them off just left the flowers and who they were for.”
“Well, thanks anyway,” Ashley said, giving him a quick smile as he left. “This is so creepy,” she said to me. “I don’t want to find out who’s holding the last flower. He’s probably some weird guy.”
We turned back around. The nachos were still there, but Chloe was gone.
*
Every once in a while, you get an idea for a song that just plays out so nicely in your head that you can’t help but sit down and write it out. Sometimes it comes so fast and so strong that it’s almost like you can’t get it down fast enough. I suppose it’s called “inspiration” or something. In any case, I had a strong dosage of it that night and my fingers were cooperating quite nicely. It was a good guitar-playing day. Sitting on my bed with my open notebook sitting next to me, guitar in my lap, pick in my right hand, and pen in my mouth, I strummed through my vocabulary of chords to find the perfect one I was looking for. I had almost found it (it turned out to be Amaj7) when my cell phone rang. Reluctantly, I picked it up off my nightstand. “Hello?”
“I thought I warned you,” a raspy voice crackled over the static. “I told you to stay away from her.” It was all too familiar. “Didn’t you get the note I left you?”
“Ender.” I started to sweat. My eyes were looking at but not seeing my CD player across the room. Every other sense went on hold to heighten my hearing as I tried to grasp his every word.
He laughed, once. It was more of a snort. “Hey, you know who I am! You know, you and I could be friends. We’re both the artsy type. Maybe I could help you design an album cover?”
I wasn’t buying it. “What do you want, Ender?”
“I want you to stay away from Ashley. I think I made that obvious. It wasn’t easy to shoot that idiot boyfriend of hers. Or,” he paused, “ex-boyfriend now, isn’t he?” I could hear him smiling.
The pieces were starting to come together in my head. “Wait, I thought… that was for ‘justice’ or something.”
“That’s right,” he muttered. “It was justice.”
“So why do you care what Ashley and I are doing?”
“Wouldn’t you like to know.”
“Yeah, I would!” I barked. “Tell me!”
“You’re in no position to be making demands,” Ender hissed. “Just do what I tell you to, or I’ll make good on my promise.”
“You can stick that gun of yours up your…” I couldn’t finish. “How about you do what I say, and leave me and Ashley the heck alone!”
He laughed. “You sound so stupid, Alex.”
“Yeah, well, I bet you feel pretty stupid sitting in jail, don’t you?”
“Who says I’m in jail?”
I didn’t know what to say.
“I’ll be seeing you soon, Alex. Whether we’re friends or enemies at that point is up to you.”
He hung up. I put down the phone.
I fell asleep with the light on that night.
Dear Diary – Chapter 2
July 18, 2007 at 4:39 pm (Novel, Prose, Writing) (crying, food, school, violence)
The next big event happened a few months later, on a Wednesday in November. Nothing out of the ordinary that day. I was working my black jeans, I had on my favorite blue striped shirt, my scarf was wrapped around my neck, and I was dodging the usual glances as I made my way from the cafeteria to the wide double doors at the end of the hallway so I could eat my lunch and study outside, where it was quiet and relatively peaceful. Lonely, sure, but I didn’t mind so much. The couple of weeks before that day had been kind of hard on me – the first quarter of school was already wrapping up, and with it came the usual tests, and thus, the usual studying – not one of my favorite activities, but necessary nonetheless. That is, if I wanted to scrape into college someday.
But when I got to the doors, my plans changed. Outside, it was pitch black and raining cats and dogs. I never thought that was a very accurate expression, and it was rather gruesome at that, but that didn’t change the fact that the rain was coming down at a thirty degree angle with the ground, and I thought I saw some hail mixed in. A lightning bolt illuminated the sky and I saw one of the school’s trees lying in the middle of the street. Normally, I’d have been excited about the rain, but this was just too strong to enjoy. With a sigh, I turned around and made for the cafeteria once more.
Finding a seat when you don’t have a regular spot is a tough thing to do. Anywhere you sit is the wrong place, because you’re always taking someone else’s spot. If they’re polite enough not to chew you out for it, they’re forced to steal someone else’s spot, and so on, until someone is invariably left with nowhere to lunch. So, I bypassed the whole thing and scoped out a loner, someone who constantly had five or six seats at his or her command. No one else sat there because they didn’t want to be grouped with said loner, but hey – I was a loner too, right? No harm to me.
The first kid I found was hunkered down over a book at the end of a table. As I got nearer, I recognized him as the artist kid I’d sat next to in biology on the first day of school, again scribbling furiously in his sketchbook.
“Mind if I sit here?” I asked, trying to be polite.
He looked up at me for a second, then went back to his drawing. For someone who talked as little as him, that meant yes, or at least that he didn’t care. I set my tray down on the table and crashed onto a chair. I didn’t try to make conversation with the boy – I knew it would be a futile attempt, and probably annoying to him as well. Besides, I was fine being left alone with my thoughts. Thoughts about the tests, thoughts about the rain, and, of course, thoughts about Ashley…
I’d never been one to snoop or stalk, but I’d asked around about Ashley a bit, just to find out more about her. I now knew that she was a first soprano in choir, and apparently she had a big solo in the next concert. She was taking all the AP and honors classes, which explained why I didn’t see her around much. And, one of the first things I’d found out was that she already had a boyfriend. I had to admit, that fact wasn’t as surprising as it could have been. I had actually expected it. But, try as I might, there seemed to be no stopping the thoughts about her. There was something about her that drew me in and wouldn’t let go. It could have been her waist, or her hair, perhaps, but maybe there was something a bit deeper than that…
As I put the fry I had in my fingers to my mouth, my eyes strayed onto the artist kid’s page. It was a miracle I didn’t see it sooner. The lines had been drawn so darkly on the page that every detail stood out in sharp contrast, and I instantly knew what it was. I had to hand it to young… what’s-his-name… he was good, but I wasn’t so sure I was entirely thrilled about his subject matter. It was a livid depiction of a warrior, dressed in full armor and wielding twin curved blades, massacring a crowd of unarmed people. Blood was everywhere, and that was what made the picture so dark. Women, children, a dog, even – all of them being brutally hacked apart by this death machine. I looked up from the page at the boy’s face. A drop of sweat was forming on his brow, his eyes were wide open, and his lips had gone dry. His knuckles had gone white because he was gripping his pencil so hard, and his other hand was almost convulsing, every muscle tense and restless. He was in some kind of homicidal trance. I pushed myself away from the table a few inches and tried not to care.
But that was when I saw the glint of black metal from inside his backpack. Suddenly I found it hard to be apathetic about the whole thing.
Unfortunately, I didn’t have time to do anything. At that moment, Jace Valentine, football star, walked through the nearest doorway with a few of his buddies, laughing. He was a big guy, muscular, with short-cropped hair and good teeth. He was also Ashley Simmons’ boyfriend. The artist kid – Ken…something? – stood up stiffly and gripped his backpack. His sketchbook and pencil clattered to the floor, but he didn’t seem to care. Before I knew what was happening, he strutted up to Jace, a determined fire in his eyes. I stood up too, expecting the worst. “What’s the problem?” Jace spat. Without a word, the artist boy reached into his bag, grabbed, and pulled out a shiny black pistol, cocked and ready to fire straight between Jace’s eyes.
All hell broke loose. A dozen girls who had been standing nearby all screamed and made for the doors as quickly as possible. After that, half of everyone in the lunchroom followed suit. The other half stayed, either frozen with fear, or curious and intrigued. I was part of the latter half. I was the one standing closest to the kid with the gun. Jace’s two friends backed away slowly. Jace froze where he was, never looking so vulnerable and weak. The boy with the gun smiled, his face alive with adrenalin and satisfaction at seeing this worm’s confidence melt away in a mere second.
“Hey… hey… don’t… look, uh…” Jace stuttered.
“Shut up,” the boy spat, his voice even raspier than the last time I’d heard it. “Do you know how long I’ve waited for this?”
Jace, trying to be accommodating, twitched his head back and forth in the tiniest of “no”s.
“Do you know about justice, Jace Valentine? Since sixth grade, since the beginning of middle school, you’ve always been the one on top. You’ve always had the friends, the cars, the money… the girls. Somewhere down the line, I was designated as the loser, the trash kid, the worthless worm, the scum. Tell me, is this justice? It wasn’t you who decided it. Not you alone. But let me tell you-” He took a sudden step forward, pressing the gun against Jace’s forehead. Jace flinched and whimpered as the boy continued his monologue. “My life has been a living hell because of you and people like you! I’m not going to kill you,” (at these words, Jace’s shoulders relaxed noticeably,) “but there are other ways that justice can be satisfied. Yes, this… is justice!” His voice was little more than a seething stream of air through his clenched teeth, but everyone could hear his speech echo around the room. His eyes were wide and bloodshot, glittering with vengeance. Slowly, he stepped backward and aimed the gun lower. He was only three feet from where I stood. The cafeteria lights reflected off the barrel. I could almost see my own frightened face in it. I saw his finger muscles tense, tightening on the trigger. In the silence, it clicked with each millimeter it moved. Jace closed his eyes. The boy’s finger pressed tighter and tighter, every click of the gun a prelude to a gunshot.
Then the power went out. We were all plunged into darkness, and a shot was fired.
All at once, I leapt forward, without fully realizing what I was doing. I tackled the boy at the very instant he fired the gun. We crashed to the floor, and the gun clattered across the tile, safely out of reach. Jace also hit the floor. I could barely make out the edges of his form in the dim light. He clutched his right arm. Blood was streaming over his hand, onto his shirt, and onto the floor. He made a strange moaning sound. The boy underneath me tried to punch me but missed because he was shaking so badly. He grabbed at my scarf and pulled. It wrapped uncomfortably tighter around my neck. I wondered if he was having a seizure or heart attack.
What happened next was all a blur. I remember a group of about ten teachers arriving on the scene and carrying the boy away. As he was being dragged from the room, he screamed back, “Let’s see you play your precious football now!” Another teacher took me roughly by the arm and led me out as well. Jace was taken to the sick room to wait for the ambulance. The next thing I remember was waiting in the principal’s office to be questioned by the school administration and the police. The boy who had fired the shot was in there now, and I knew I wouldn’t be seeing much more of him. The lights had come back on. I felt nauseous, and my arms and legs were both asleep. I was hunched over myself, clutching my stomach, trying to breathe regularly. I faintly heard the door open and shut, and then someone asked, “Is Jace still here?”
I looked up. It was Ashley, pale-faced and breathing hard. It looked like she’d ran all the way there. “No,” said the kindly secretary, “he’s already been taken to the hospital. Have a seat, dear. He’s going to be just fine.”
She turned and collapsed next to me. I felt too sick to be nervous or excited. “What happened?” she asked urgently.
The secretary sighed. “Another student pulled a gun on him and shot him once in the arm.” Ashley gasped, but the secretary continued, sounding as if she were assuring herself more than Ashley, “It wasn’t a bad wound, they think he’ll be fine in a few weeks, there’s no need to worry…”
“No need to worry?” Ashley breathed, struggling to accept this new information. Her accent was stronger now. “My boyfriend’s… been shot! Who did it?”
The secretary shook her head. “I don’t know, dear, I wasn’t there. But this young man,” she turned to me, “was.”
Ashley looked at me, and I looked at her. For an instant, her eyes were a deep well of emotion, filled to the top with fear and questions. She looked younger and innocent, like a child scared of a thunderstorm, and she was looking to me for comfort, for answers. “Is he… really going to be okay?” she asked quietly.
It took me a moment to regain control of my muscles. Finally, I nodded. “Yes. He… I mean, he wasn’t hurt too bad.” That was a fact I had no assurance of, but it seemed like the right thing to say. My head was swimming with fog anyway, and I couldn’t think straight. “I mean, it was just… his arm, it could have been a lot worse, you know…”
For a moment, I wanted to tell her about what I’d done to try to save the day, but as I watched her bury her head in her hands, as I watched her shoulders start to shake, there were no words left in me. The lights suddenly went out again. I wanted to put a comforting hand on her back or her shoulder, but all I could do was sit straight forward in my chair, staring at the black point where the ends of my scarf were, trying not to throw up or start crying myself.
As I listened, I wanted Ashley to be mine, so she wouldn’t have to cry alone.
Melina Sheet
December 28, 2005 at 1:50 pm (Anime/Manga, Drawing, RM/OW, Visual Art) (characters, crying, surprise)
