Category Archives: Short Story

The way we love

The way we love

By Alyssa Leshovsky

The only time Britta had thought about the extent of her relationship with Casey was on a warm spring day in early May. She was at her desk in Mrs. Hall’s English class, bent over math problems that had yet to be assigned, with her eyebrows creased in concentration. The chatter of students as they sauntered to class buzzed brightly around the room, and scratched persistently at her skin, but she never broke eye contact with the book. Mrs. Hall stood nearby, peering slightly at the door as if anyone other than Britta would walk in before a minute before class, when the music started.

The clank of two leather boots yanked the girl from her studies. The familiarity in the sound of the steps pulled her attention towards the door, where a tall girl stood, her chin dipped down, and her eyes appearing to be counting the tiles on the floor.

Casey was her contrast, many people would tell her. Where Britta was short, her friend was tall. When she chose to be silent, Casey would say whatever thought that came to her head with such confidence, it was hard not to agree with the same amount of enthusiasm. When faced with a heavy situation, Britta would take time to view her options and refuse to make a decision until she visioned every outcome in her head. Casey would just dive in with whatever solution came to her first. And yet the two depended on each other, like how paper needs staples to keep it together. Casey had always been there, and so Britta found comfort in the sound of her steps, or the way her voice rose higher than other’s in a crowd, either from passion or because Britta’s ear would search for it. In the years they’d been friends, Britta had become understanding of all of Casey’s quirks.

Arriving two minutes before the music was not something Casey did, and so Britta’s brain was already clued into something being wrong when she spotted the twinkle of a tear on Casey’s cheek, shining like freshly fallen snow, but looking as wrong as Mona Lisa would if she laughed.

Concern rested heavily in her stomach as she turned fully towards her friend, who sat in her desk with her eyes still concentrating on the floor. Casey never focused as hard as she was on the floor in that moment, and Britta knew that something big had happened.

“What’s wrong?” She asked as she moved seats, her books still lying open on her desk. She froze for a moment to think about how lonely her chair looked without her in it, like a puppy that had been abandoned by a little boy who favored his DS instead. It was usually Casey who switched seats, and even though no one else was there, moving now felt wrong to the girl. She settled uncomfortably into a new chair, this one lower and colder than hers, but closer to the friend that obviously needed her help.

“It’s nothing,” Casey whispered through a wavering voice. “Go back to your homework. Let me guess, two units ahead of everyone else?”

It wasn’t uncommon for Casey to snap at Britta. Her words were usually painted with some shade of sarcasm, but on such occasions, Britta would counter her bitchiness with: “Do you need a tissue to wipe up how much snot was in that sentence?” Today that felt inappropriate.

“Three,” She answered. “What’s wrong?”

Casey looked at her, and Britta was introduced to red, swollen eyes. She wasn’t sobbing, only one or two tears would escape it’s mascara prison, but the hopeless desperation that twinkled in the wetness of her blue irises caused Britta’s throat to tighten. “Sam dumped me.”  

Britta felt her surprise make it’s way to her mouth, wedging a gap between her lips. She blinked once, her eyes staying closed for a moment to process what her friend had just confessed. Britta knew the probability of a high school relationship lasting was low, but had she been the type to bet, she would have put her money on Sam and Casey. They had a strange, simplistic kind of love that Britta was sure no one would ever be able to duplicate. Sam had adored Casey, so much so that he almost seemed to display the same kind of actions as a serial killer, however, Casey had found that endearing. The idea that a boy who loved her best friend so much he refused to eat meat because she was a vegetarian could dump her didn’t sit right with her. Casey and Sam not being together was wrong. To see one without the other was like seeing a seven year old do taxes or an eighty year old in a ball pit.

“I don’t understand,” She said. Casey’s face darkened with anger that was directed solely at Britta.

“I’m an ugly bitch,” She hissed, her eyes narrowed on her friend, “Tim’s words. Sam didn’t even have the balls to do it himself.”

It made sense then, all of it. It was like she had finally found the piece of the mystery that would finally point out who the criminal really was. “But you’re not-” She began, desperate to explain what she had just realized.

“Yeah,” she snorted, her words holding the hands of an eye roll, “I got the deep end of the gene pool.”

“Forget the deep end,” Britta exclaimed, “You came out of the hot tub.” And it wasn’t just a best friend trying to give a girl a little self esteem boost; Casey was hot. Like lava in your eyes every time you looked at her. With hair the color of the sky when the sun first touched the clouds during a sunset, and eyes that had more shades then there were of gray, she was the original girl on fire.

But she wasn’t just trying to convince Casey of her beauty, she was trying to save her best friend’s relationship.

“Spare me the cliche ‘you’re amazing’ speech that you probably saw on last night’s episode of Glee.” Her jaw clenched, and her eyes flickered with scorn. “I don’t want to hear about relationships from a person who’s never been kissed.”

Her surprise hit her flat across her face, and tingled down her arms to her fingertips. Casey had done a lot of things to Britta, but she had never so easily humiliated her. She never used those type of things as weapons before. “I don’t,” she whimpered as her embarrassment painted her cheeks, “I don’t understand.” She was just trying to help.

“Of course you don’t,” Casey thundered, “You don’t know anything about life or love or friendship. I want you to leave me alone.”

Of course she didn’t. She knew she was Casey’s ugly best friend, the Robin to her Batman, and she was forever forced to sit on the sidelines, doing homework inbetween class instead of making out with her boyfriend in the hallway, but Britta wasn’t completely stupid when it came to life. After all, she had seen the way Tim looked at Sam, with the same kind of adoration Sam looked at Casey with.

“But you don’t understand,” Britta said urgently. People had begun to stride in, and the music was pumping through the speakers at a fast pace. She needed to make this quick. “Tim’s-”

“I don’t want to hear your stupid idea in why Tim and Sam thought they needed to humiliate me in the hallway. I don’t want to hear the theory you’ve come up in your head of why Sam couldn’t do it himself, why he avoided me and let his best friend do it for him. I want you, and everyone else, to leave me the hell alone.” The tears were coming fast now, like a storm in her eyes. Each tear left a black smudge, and she wiped at it like it was blemishing her face.

Britta stood, and walked numbly to her seat. Casey didn’t want to hear, and Britta was the type to give up easily. Maybe she couldn’t convince her friend of her importance, and maybe she couldn’t mend the relationship she knew Tim purposely sabotaged, but she could give Casey the space she desperately asked for.

She looked back at her friend only to see her face being cradled by her shaking hands. She swallowed, her mind asking a question she’ll never voice.

Why was her friend’s self worth dependent on who did or didn’t love her?

 

When she was eight, Casey punched Sam in the face for calling Britta a “butthead.” It was the favor that started their friendship, and a favor Britta never thought she’d have to return, however,  it would seem that the moment where Britta was called to be the knight has come, and she had seven minutes to find her target.

She found Tim instead.

Britta and Tim were often victims of the “double date.” That’s probably how Britta knew of Tim’s love for Sam. While Sam stared at Casey with nothing but adoration in his puppy-brown eyes, Tim would look on with a clenched jaw and a pulsing green gaze. Now his eyes sparkled with the tears of guilt.

“Where’s Sam?” She asked. Tim shrugged one shoulder. “I know you know where he is, Tim.”

He looked up. He looked uncomfortable, but not in the same way that Britta feels when she stays in the hallway for longer than the time it takes to get to class. He looked like the world fell off it’s axis and now he couldn’t stand or breathe or think. He looked beyond guilty. He looked sick, and so the part of Britta that liked Tim, the part that sat next to him on those awkward double dates when Casey and Sam would be too engrossed with each other to notice if flies had started doing the macarena around their heads, and talked with him, about the math and their favorite books and whatever else Casey would call them nerdy for saying. It was this part of her that pulled her into the empty stop next to him.

“Tell me.”

“Sam doesn’t know what I did. He thinks- he was really upset when Casey didn’t show up this morning. He thought he did something wrong.” He looked at her. “He’s never going to care about me that way, and I feel horrible, because I wanted to be happy so bad that I ruined his chances of it.”

“You could fix it?” She suggested. She could think of a hundred thousand ways he could fix it, but in the moment she said it she realized that it didn’t matter, he needed to be able to think of a way to fix it. So instead of pushing him towards a solution that wouldn’t make him feel better, she tapped his shoulder. “Love sucks.”

“Yeah,” he breathed.

“But it also never ends. You love one person, and you love another, and another until you think that there’s no more room for you to love. And sometimes it destroys you, but other times it fills you with this amazing power you feel you can be anyone or do anything. And it never ends, this constant circle of love sucks and love is amazing, and at some point you won’t want it to. Because love does a lot of things to a person, but I do believe that one day you will have what Sam and Casey have. Just not with Sam.”

He looked at her, and one corner of his thin lips pulled into an apologetic smile. “Thanks,” he breathed, “I’ll… I’ll go tell Sam what I did. And you can tell Casey about me. I sort of deserve it?”

“I’m not going to tell her because you deserve to be punished. I’ll tell her it was a misunderstanding, because being gay is your secret to tell, and not something that can be used to hit you with when you make a mistake.” After a minute she added, “Don’t think that you don’t deserve anything good, including love, just because you go about attaining it differently than the norm.”

He smiled a little more, but the pain of his guilt still showed in his eyes. “Thanks,” He said again and turned around, walking off, leaving Britta to sit against the concrete wall.

“And Casey said Glee wouldn’t teach me anything about life,” She mumbled as she pulled herself up and scurried to class.

35

35

By: Malik Nusseibeh

“Quick, take the exit! Go from 94,” Sarah blurted out from the passenger seat.

“What? Why? We’re already on 35, that’ll only take longer,” I respond as I continue straight ahead. “Trust me Sarah, I’ve been living here forever. 35 is much shorter.” She doesn’t respond other than turning her head to look out the window. It’s the first of August and the humidity is a killer. The trees stand perfectly still underneath the heat. The sun peaks in between the clouds. It felt like the calm before a storm and her expression mimics the sky’s. Sarah had seemed upset for the last few days, but I can’t tell why. Maybe she just missed the east.

I drive for about a mile before braking, “What? Construction on the bridge?”
“Told you to take the 94.”
“We’ll still make it,” I insist while glancing at the clock that reads six o’two pm. She was

right and I feel guilty and kind of like an idiot. We have no choice but to wait through traffic.
I read the clock, six o’three. Being held back in traffic gets me thinking too much. I merge into the right lane. How am I going to pay next month’s rent? We’re approaching the bridge. What if I don’t get the job? I start tapping my hand. What if she leaves me? The clock

flashes, six o’four. The nervousness caught up with me, as my leg begins to shudder.
“Sean, you’re doing it again.” Sarah speaks softly. I stop. “It’s gonna be fine Sean.” “It’s just … the rent, the job, I …”
“You’ll get the job, Sean, I know you will.”
“It’s not just that, everything’s just happening all of a sudden. It was like just yesterday

I was finishing college. Then I meet you, and I’m living in my own apartment, and now I’m getting a real job.”

“Yea,” she answers in a whisper.
“It’s so exciting, but I just wish it could all slow down a bit. You know?”
We’re half way on the bridge.
Six o’five.
“You’re right, Sean. Things are going kind of fast. And I’ve been thinking. Maybe,” she

pauses as my leg begins to shudder again. “Maybe it’d be best if I moved back in with my family for a while.”

“No.” One short, quick, little word is all I say as time freezes. I hear a bang. A car slams us. Brake lights flash. The foundation gives. The dominoes fall. We collapse. The cars moving, but my foot’s on the brake. There’s a splash.

All I see is the dust. The car’s against the fence. Everything is a blur and all I can hear is that one word ringing in my head, “no”.

The windshield has cracked and the water begins to leak into the car. My leg is still frozen on the break but the car still felt like it was moving. The cold air is invaded by the warmth of the water. Death pulls down on my legs and crawls up my body. I finally realize what’s happening. The bridge collapsed.

I unclick my seatbelt. Removing my foot from the break, I frantically look around. The back is crushed. I try rolling down the window. Idiot. Why did I think that would work? I’ll smash it open. I take deep breaths then elbow the window as hard as I can. Nothing. I try again. And again. And again. A small crack appears. It’s working. One more time Sean. Just once more. The glass shatters as more water rushes in through the window dousing my body.

I need to climb out but the water is so violent. It’s like swimming against the tides of an ocean. I need to pull myself through. Both hands on the frame of the window, I squeeze through the small opening.

I climb out of the water up the slant of the road. I welcome the light, the air, the wind on my skin, but not the sound of sirens. While I was in the water others sat beneath rubble. People trapped in cars, others calling for help. I wasn’t the only one.

I wasn’t … the only one … the only one in the car. I look behind me. She’s not there. “Sarah,” I whisper to myself, and then yell, “Sarah. Sarah!”

I go back to the car and to the window on the right. I peer through the glass. She appears unconscious, but the water’s only to her chest. I bang on the glass, hoping for something, anything. A movement. A reaction. I go over to the windshield and ram myself into it. There’s more water than there was before. I try kicking with my legs. The water’s to her chin. I smash again. She isn’t moving. Another time. Water’s covering her mouth. Again. Her hair’s floating on the surface. Again. It’s up to her nose. Again. It breaks and I fall through.

I take a breath of the little air there is in here. I unclick the seat belt. It’s tangled with her arm. Pull it out. Get out. Her arm’s finally loose. The car is nearly submerged and I take my last breath before pulling her through the windshield. The car begins to roll down the slant of road and down into the river. Her leg, it’s stuck against the crushed edge of the car. All I can do is pull until we’re both out of the car. I hold her as I swim up. The surface, it’s so close,

but I can’t hold my breath. Keep swimming. My legs can barely keep moving. I feel myself stop. Am I falling? I need to push through. The surface breaks.

I take an enormous breath of air. She doesn’t.

I put Sarah’s arm over me and swim back towards the side we had come from. By the time we get to the river bank the current pushes us nearly underneath the second bridge. There were rocks and some small trees by the river bank. I place Sarah down where the river meets, while I climb out from the water. I grab her from underneath her arms and drag her out from the river and onto the rocks.

She’s cold. Her skin is pale. I tilt back her head. My hands are trembling. This is just how I learned in high school. The breaths. I pinch her nose with my fingers I place my mouth over hers and give two breaths. How many compressions? Was it thirty? No, one hundred? I just have to start. I put my hands on top of her chest. One hundred per minute. I take a deep breath. I start to push down rhythmically on her chest. Is that deep enough? I have to push harder. I give her two more breaths. “Don’t you die on me Sarah,” I whisper. I start compressions again. Nothing’s happening. “Stay with me, Sarah.” My eyes water. My vision blurs. “Don’t you die on me. Don’t you die on me, Sarah!” I keep pushing harder and harder. Faster and faster. I give two more breaths. The sirens fade. “Stay with me.” The cars are silent. “You can’t die yet. You can’t leave me now, Sarah.”

She chokes. I turn her head to the side and a little water comes out. She begins coughing hard until her throat is clear and starts breathing heavily. Her eyes open and I see the small hazel light shine with them. I pull her up to a sitting position. All I can think to do is hold her in my arms yet she doesn’t speak a word.

I didn’t notice the cut on my arm or the blood coming from my forehead until now. There’s a cut on Sarah’s face and her leg’s bleeding. She’s shivering and today I had no jacket to keep her warm. “We have to find help,” I speak, “There’s bound to be an ambulance closer to the bridge. Let me help you up.”

“I can’t feel my leg.” I figure it’s from her leg getting squeezed in the car.

“Just try leaning on me.” We don’t take three steps before she trips. I catch her from falling and I use whatever is left of my strength to pick her up. I walk up a tiny slope until we reach a small road that follows the side of the river. There’s some squad cars and an ambulance just down the road. I start towards their direction. Sarah is shivering intensely in my arms. I keep moving until an officer tries to stop and talk to me. “Get her some help,” I say

as I walk passed him and continue toward the ambulance. “I need help! Get her a blanket or something!”

A paramedic approaches me and helps me place her on the back of the ambulance while I begin to explain to her what had happened. She immediately places some blankets around Sarah and then gives another to me. She takes a look at our injuries and does anything she can to help.

A police officer swings by to ask some questions. Sarah didn’t speak much after I pulled her out of the water other than nodding occasionally or giving a short, silent reply. Neither did she ask me a single question about what had happened. From what we’ve been told it seems that Sarah and I are among a few of the first people to come out from the wreckage.

From where I’m sitting I see smoke, cars piled next to each other, large fragments of road, a school bus on its side. The wind has slowed down, but the humidity is distressing. How long has it been? I check my watch only to see that it reads six o’seven while the second hand ticks but doesn’t move. I remember my grandfather telling me to keep it out of the water. The paramedic tells me that it’s six eighteen and all I can remember is seeing the clock flash six o’five before the bridge fell.

I glance over at Sarah. Her once long brown hair has curled up like it would when she gets out of the shower. Her face is pale like it would be when I make her warm soup while she’s sick in bed. She carries an expressionless face. A face that almost reminds me of the one I see when she’s lost in a good book. The faces look so similar but they’re still so different in a way that I can’t quite understand. The one I see now has that same lost look in her eyes. Maybe a midwest life wasn’t meant for someone like her. But it doesn’t matter anymore. Whether I make next week’s rent. If I get the job or not. It doesn’t matter. I’d move to the east with her if that’s what it meant to keep her around, because right now I just know that she’s alive. I know she’s still here.

Somewhere Between Grey and White

Somewhere Between Grey and White

By: Malik Nusseibeh

Eggshell walls, baby powder floor, and there I am sitting on the cream colored exam table of a ghostwhite doctor’s office wearing a maroon shirt with beige pants and sneakers that are so scuffed up that they’ve lost their color. It’s a tiny eight by twelve room with a small counter underneath a line of cupboards across the wall, a couple of chairs, a scale, and all the other usual things found in a doctor’s office.

There’s a knock on the door and it swings open abruptly. An elderly man walks in with little enthusiasm. He has aging blonde hair and a pair of round spectacles just above his rosy cheeks. The sagging skin from below his chin is practically a part of his neck. He wasn’t very large but was obviously gaining some pounds on his belly. His hands are small and liver spots are beginning to show. His fingers are stubby, bare with no bands. “Hello ­ ah,” he takes a look down at his clipboard, “Alan ­ ah Lockwood. I am Dr. Ollie Possum.” He put his arm out for a handshake.

I accept his greeting and reply, “Nice to meet you.”

When he let go he looked down at his hand, “Ah, right.” He proceeds to wipe it on his snowy lab coat. He takes a good long look at his clipboard and there’s an uncomfortable silence. At one point he begins to make a swallowing sound with his mouth so loud in the reticence of the wan room that I could hear the saliva being tossed around in his arid mouth. He breaks the quiet with a question, “It says here that you’ve been getting lightheaded?” His voice wasn’t rough like most old men; it was gentle. He pronounced the words clearly and without a slur.

“Yes.”
“Could you elaborate?” He looks back down at his clipboard.
Dr. Possum looked comical. Something about him didn’t quite seem real to me as if he

was completely made up. His hair, his glasses, his aged face that looked as if he were one of those old men from the movies. Even his name Ollie Possum? Where does one even come up with such a colorful name? “I’ve just been getting really dizzy and I start to blackout a little.”

He continues looking at his clipboard taking a few notes here and there, “And you fainted? Yes?”

“Yes.”

He didn’t seem to impressed with my response and doesn’t bother looking up. He pauses briefly and then asks, “How old are you?”

“Fifteen.”
“Do you drive?”
“No.”
“Use alcohol?”
“No.”
“Smoke?”
“No.” He doesn’t say anything then brings down his clipboard just enough to make

proper eye contact and remains silent. “I don’t smoke,” I reassure. He raises his clipboard back up and the silence resumes.

“Well let’s take a listen to that heart.” Dr. Possum put his stethoscope on his ears and the other end on my chest. He quietly stares into the ceiling. He moves the stethoscope around on my chest and has a dazed look on his face. “How incredibly bizarre.” He pauses, “I can’t seem to find a heart in there.” I didn’t speak I just gave him a raised eyebrow. This man’s insane. How is he a doctor? He looks down at my chest and begins to chuckle in such a way that made me jump. “Haha, what a fool I am! The hearts on the left side!” In that moment I saw him go from a single vibrant shade to a bursting rainbow.

He moves over to the left side of my chest. “There we go, I can hear it loud and clear now.” He goes back to staring at the ceiling and it’s dead quiet again. He put on the same face but this time he seems more intrigued then confused. “How exotic.”

“What is it this ­”

“Shhh,” putting up his hand to silence me. I stare at him blankly. “What a curious little heartbeat you have there.”

“My heartbeat?”

“Why yes, your heartbeat.” His face still looks rather intrigued. “Let’s move on to your blood pressure.” He adjusts the band onto my arm, puts the stethoscope underneath, and begins to pump. My arm is numb and when he releases the pressure I feel the blood run through to my hand. “A bit lower than the usual.” He writes down some numbers and takes off the band. “You said you fainted and that you’ve been feeling lightheaded. Is that right?”

“Yes, we’ve been over this already.”

“I believe so.” I stare at him blankly again waiting for him to continue or follow up with another question. There was an uncomfortable silence again as I waited for him to say something else, “Is there anything else?”

“Anything else?”

“Do you feel anything else? In your limbs? Your chest? Anything.”
“My chest?”
“Yes.”
I can’t really come up with something to say but I’d hate to disappoint him with another

‘no,’ “Well, very rarely I’ll feel chest pain if I eat too fast. But I take it that’s just heartburn?” “Right.”

“That’s it really other than like a heavy heart or something when I’m dragged with emotions, usual stuff.”

“What’s that?” He replies as he’s once again intrigued.

“You know ­ when you get exhilarated or anxious? Your heart gets heavy.” He stares at me blankly as I would at him, “Your chest tightens up?”

“How extraordinary.” His face is in absolute astonishment.
“You don’t know what I’m talking about?”
“Not a clue.”
“When you’re getting ready for something big to happen and your hearts about to pop

out of your chest.” He continues to give me a blank stare, “Like when you’re with somebody that makes you feel like the happiest person in the world, it’s like you have a stone in place of your heart and you have to carry the weight.”

He looks absolutely astounded and at the same time baffled, “And this happens often?”

“Well ­ no I guess not. It’s rare but it’s absolutely incredible.”
“I’ve never heard of such a thing.” He begins taking vigorous notes on his clipboard. “Isn’t this ­ normal?”
“Normal?”
“Don’t emotions come from the heart? Doesn’t love come from the heart? Isn’t that

what they say?”
He chuckles, “That’s what the p​oets say! Feelings don’t come from the heart!” He

continues to laugh.
I’m confused, a bit frightened by him, and honestly, beginning to feel a bit misled. Is he

speaking the truth? Or is he so far at sea he’s never felt a thing his entire life. “Happiness, you’ve never felt it in your heart before?”

“Happiness is just an increase of dopamine and serotonin transmission in the brain. The b​rain.​The heart has nothing to do with it.”

“How have you never felt this before?”
“Listen Aaron ­”
“Alan.”
“Emotions come from the brain.” He points at his head. “You’ve had to have felt this before?”

“I spent nine years in medical school ­”
“People always say love comes from the heart.”
“And the last thirty­eight years as a doctor.”
“Isn’t that why our hearts beat faster?”
“And what I’ve learned is that you can feel however you want whenever you want.”
“I can’t be the only one.”
“Because it’s all inside of your little head. You see? If you want to be happy you can be

happy.”
“Mr. Potato, please.”

“If you want to be sad you can be sad. Put all that teenage angst aside and feel what you want because at the end of the day all your feelings come from your head. You don’t have to waste time feeling sad or upset if you don’t want to. Your heart’s not telling you to do anything. It simply keeps you alive!” There is a silence. A long silence. I can hear the reticence of the room again. His mouth is still moving. He may have well still been talking but I heard nothing but the stillness of the room. “You said you wanted to be an English professor?”

“Excuse me?” I have no memory of such a conversation, at least not with him.

“Shame. You’d make a wonderful teacher.” He looks back at his clipboard and writes down a few more things. I stare blankly into the milky light of the room. “Let’s go find your mum and have a chat with her, yes?”

“Are you saying … I have broken heart?”
“You could call it that, yes.”
There’s another silence but it was unlike any of the others. I’ve been stuck in the

translucent, alabastrine light of the room until it’s suddenly clouded and I’m choking in it. I’m surrounded by it and it’s strangling my throat. It’s dusty and drab like ash. It’s grey.

“Well then how do you fix a broken heart?.” “That depends. Literally or figuratively?”

I sit there a moment and when I look at him he grins and gives me a nod. I return it and I get up off the exam table and walk with him to the waiting room where my mother has been patiently sitting.

As she sees us walking near she gets up and puts an arm around me. “A word Ms. Lockwood?” Dr. Ollie Possum pulls her over to a side and they chat while I sit down where my mother had been waiting.

There’s a man sitting across from me. He looks somewhere in his mid­twenties. He has long dark brown hair with the sides of his head buzzed. It looks as if he shaved this morning but was already growing quite a shadow on his face. His jawline was define. There’s a sleeve of tattoos on his right arm. He’s leaning out of his seat with his hands on his head. He looks nervous. Was he waiting for somebody? Or was there bad news awaiting his ears? It almost looks as if he were getting himself together to get up on a stage in front of thousands of people.

He looks up at me and our eyes meet. I stare straight into them and he stares right back into mine. He’s reading my mind, and his eyes, they’re tender, lush and sprouting into the season. Fresh, grassy, and juvenile. Like emeralds. In them I see anguish, and guilt, and despair, as if he were ready to cry. And although it only lasts a moment it, I’m convinced that I’m looking into my own two eyes in a reflection of myself.

“You’re sick.” He whispers as neither a question nor a fact. “Or that’s what they told you. Something’s wrong with you. That something’s not quite right about you.” I don’t reply but neither does he expect me to. “Well that’s just what the doctors say,” he says with a gentle smirk, but it doesn’t last. “That you must be sick or something cause you came to them. Right? And even when you’re perfectly fine they’ll convince you otherwise. So when you go home and wake up the next morning you can feel all better and think that they fixed you when there was never anything wrong.” He pauses but continues to look me in the eyes. I imagine he see’s the same in my eyes that I see in his. “Don’t listen to whatever they’re telling you. You’re sad. That’s ok, because when you see the colors again they’ll only gleam brighter than they did before. Listen to your heart, cause there’ll come a day where it’s empty inside and you’ll be a lost puppy.”

He pauses and I take a second to take in what he’s saying. “But isn’t that just what the poets say?”

A smile broke out on his face again, “Just because it’s what the poets say doesn’t make it any less real than what you’re feeling right now.”

Then I feel it. That feeling in my heart that I couldn’t explain. That feeling of a boulder in my chest. The one that feels like my heart’s going to pop. The one that the doctor said wasn’t right. The one he couldn’t understand. The one he couldn’t feel. And then I realize, I’m not the one with the broken heart, he is.

I try to collect my thoughts to say something but a woman walks into the waiting room, “Michael Borne.” We both immediately look over at her. The man, Michael, looks back at me and as he stands up ready to walk away, he points at me.

“It’s in the heart.” Those were the last words I’d heard from him and I try to get one last glimpse of those eyes. He follows the lady down a hall and I focus on the imagine of him walking away. A blue button up denim t­shirt that was quite tight. Some long black pants folded at the ankle and a pair of those dress shoe like boots that were becoming more common. I wonder what had happened to him. What did the doctor say to him? Was he sick? He had to be, right? He was going to them. So he has to be sick.

I remain in the waiting room while my mother continues talking to Dr. Possum. The set’s of turquoise chairs are mostly empty between the eggshell walls on the baby powder floor of the clinic. There’s about twelve of them, chairs that is. And there I am in a maroon shirt, beige pants, and a pair of sneakers so scuffed up that the laces are no longer white.

New Friends New Beginings

 

New Friends New Beginings

by: Makala Sabas

She was growing up in a small town of Asbury, Missouri Where there wasn’t to do. Her best friend had just moved away and she was now alone. Her best friend and her had her were friends for 11 ½ years. It was a week before summer and she had everything planned out from going to the creek and going swimming to going the to each others house and sleeping over.

On the last day before her best friend left forever, they gave each other a gift to each other that had belong to them, it would remind each other of their best Freind every time they looked at it! It made them both break down and cry. The next morning when her Best Friend was leaving they hugged and cried with each other for the very last time. Her life changed forever and she felt like she would never find another friend like Addie

She thought she wouldn’t find a new friend in time for summer. One day right down the road where her friend used to live a new kid was moving in.  She was watching out her window,wondering if it would be anything like her  best friend Addie; or would it be a BOY! As she watched she saw a kid about her age walk out of the house wearing a green hoodie covering their head, she couldn’t tell.  They walked over to the garage and she thought whoever it was would never replace Addie either way.  As she was sitting remembering all the amazing memories with her best friend, out came the kid with a blue bike and his hood down.  It was a boy! Oh no, not a boy. Now I have no one. He won’t be able to play with me like addie did.  His name was Thomas. His family had just moved to Asbury from Red Lodge, Montana.

Thomas and his family were having a neighborhood party over at their new house and my family and I went over there. We met his parents and my parents introduced me to Thomas  “Hello Thomas” they said “this is our daughter Abigail.” Thomas’s parents looked at her and asked if they both wanted to go outside. Both of the kids walked off in the same direction Abby followed Thomas.

It was about 10:30 and time to go home so Abby and her parents headed up the block to their house. Abby was really tired and was ready to go to bed. She said goodnight to her parents and headed down the hall to her bedroom. As she laid in bed, tears came to her eyes, while thinking that he could never come close to the friend she had in Addie.

The next day Abby went out to the mailbox and Thomas walked out and said “hi” so Abby said “hi”. He asked if she could show him around town and show him what there is there to. She Shrugged and said “I guess”. So Abby went in and asked her parents if she could show Thomas around town and they said yes.

So off they went on their bikes towards town, it only took them about 5 minutes to bike to town. When they got there they locked their bikes up in front of the library and went inside. She showed Thomas around the library and introduced her to her school friends. It was a hot summer day so they all decided to go to the ice cream parlor to cool off before checking out the rest of the town.  Thomas asked what else there was to do in town and Abby said ‘theres one place that nobody else in town knows about, I guess we could go there?”  Tears came to her eyes thinking about the memories that she and Addie had made at this special place.  Little did she know that her and Addie had never had an adventure like her and Thomas were about to embark upon.

Thomas looked at her and with a smile on his face said “yeah, lets go”, so they set off to the secret place.They walked on a path that led them into the woods and ended at the lake. Abby had built up a fort with her friend who had moved away. Thomas asked if he could go in and she said yes. As they were going in they noticed that people must have been living in there because there were wrappers and clothing scatter around. They figured whoever it was hadn’t been there for a while so they decided to go in and check out the inside.  They went in and started to pick up the chairs and clean up the wrapped and bring out the clothing that the people left there.  They started talking about Thomas’s old school in Red Lodge and how he had just started playing baseball last year.  They talked about Abby and how she was the star in last years school play.  Then Abby told Thomas about the time that her and Addie went and jumped off the rope into the creek.  While she was in the middle of the story Thomas looked puzzled and Abby felt frustrated “Why doesn’t he care about Addie” she thought. He walked past her and said “what’s that?”  She turned around and saw Thomas open a duffle bag that was laying on the floor under an old blanket.  All the sudden Thomas’s eyes got really wide, she walked over to him and was shocked, “Where did all this money come from” she said very frightenedly.

They got scared so they ran to their bikes and biked to the top of a hill. Thomas said “what should we do?” “We should tell my dad” Abby said, her heart racing.   They wondered if they should go right to the police. Abby decided that they should just go home and sleep on it and meet at the hill and 9am.

The next day they met at the hill and decided to tell their parents.  They went home and told their parents about their findings.  They all met up and decided to go to the police station and report everything. They walked in and saw a wanted poster.  It read “WANTED” and had photos of two men that had robbed a grocery store from the next town over. The kids told the police about the fort and the bag with the money in it.  The police told them to go home and they would check it out. They warned them to stay away until it was safe.  They all went home.  Abby thought about what would have happened if Thomas wasn’t there with her and she went by herself, what would have happened if the men had been there. She couldn’t sleep at all.  The next morning Thomas came over after breakfast and they were sitting at the couch watching T.V.  There was a knock on the door. Abby’s dad opened the door and there were the police.  They said that the men in the wanted poster at the station were the ones that were at the fort. The police arrested them last night and there will be a press conference held this afternoon and the mayor wanted them there.  They got ready and arrived at the park where it was being held.  As they were sitting there on stage next to the mayor he said that there was a reward and as he said that he turned towards the kids and handed them each a check for $1,000.  The town started to clap and yell with excitement.  There was a party after with food and dancing for the whole town. As Abby sat at the table with Thomas she looked up and thought, this was the start of a great friendship.