Friday, February 12, 2016

The Transferential Times.

"Dear Don,
     "It’s so easy to get caught up in the wheel of the world, turning along with the hand of time that governs everything we do, isn’t it? We are a time-obsessed culture, constantly measuring how long one spends in any given activity. I’m enslaved by the clock that everyone else seems to be operating on. I’m missing that internal timer that is supposed to go off at the proper time to eat, sleep and work.  I constantly miss deadlines because I lack the willpower to drive my talents by the clock, and I don’t know how to govern the times when inspiration strikes me. I’m still confused and frustrated by the way time is measured at a much more rapid pace at this school. I felt myself age faster in the last 8 months than I had in the last 15 years of legal adulthood.  I discovered about 48 gray hairs that never existed before since nearly being driven to madness from the exhaustion, and felt so utterly humbled by the proximity of time between me and the rest of my fellow classmates. I, the perpetual preteen, never felt so old in my entire life. What’s worse than that is feeling 15 years behind the current-- an 80's baby who grew up in a 90's world-- now stuck in the dissonant noise of the “new millennium," was the hyper-present consciousness of what life was like before technology, and feeling so completely dismayed and dismantled by the technological storm that embarked on the shores of my frigidly-arid life thereafter. I was born during the Cold War, grew up with Reagans and Bushes and their holy crusades in the name of wealth and austerity; now I’m SO tired of wars and poverty, and constantly feeling like I'm being dragged through the conveyor belt of American life.. Technology created this world that I wasn’t raised to be prepared for, because the adults didn’t know how to prepare for it either—they just knew how to get to it in order to create more wealth. But, I digress.
           " I jumped right into White Noise, eager to see some great revelation of life similar to what Mikel Jollett, lead singer of The Airborne Toxic Event, saw when he’d read the novel in his earlier years.  The music produced by this band is some of the most profound I’ve ever heard, so I felt like there is some experience there that can be shared, some great moment of epiphany that will lead me to the Promised Land of muses and clear-water springs of eternal inspiration, where I’d drink from the fountains of eternal youth and prosper on the ideas that poured from these endless cups from God himself—you know, the way any one would imagine a rock star to do. I mean, how else would he be able to live a rock star life? Sex, drugs and rock-and-roll—that’s the American Dream. However, I met Jack Gladney and his family and I realize that I know these people. I’ve met this exact face before. I don’t think he went by Jack Gladney then, and he might not have been such a pallid tone, but you never forget a face.
            "Always worrying about what his future held, Jack began to fear death because he couldn’t control how he would die, unless he did it to himself. Ever the narcissist, he is never going to kill or blame himself, so it’s better to project that fear onto someone, or something, else outside of himself. I watched him project his fears onto anything he could—his job, his family, his friends, his wives—even some crazy toxic chemical spill that poisoned the air terrified him into imagining the worst. However, instead of causing him to think about the past and how his imagination creates the worst of every situation, leading him to carry out his own fantasies into reality, he imagines that there will be a pill, some great advance of medical science, that will magically make all of his worries disappear, and he even becomes envious of the idea that Babette attained that magic before him. He doesn’t even really react emotionally to the idea that his loving, perfect wife has been sleeping with another man as trade for the pill—it’s more like he’s mad at her for holding out on him. Now, I know this type of behavior, and it’s called addictive behavior; Jack, or whatever he wants to call himself now, is exhibiting junkie tactics, and I know this because I know who Jack used to be. Before he had all those wives and the comfortable lifestyle, Jack was a drug addict and an alcoholic—which is basically the same thing, except sometimes one wants liquefied drugs to quench the thirst the solidified drugs leave behind.
            "The man that everyone knows has a secret that no one knows, and he can’t even admit it to himself. Instead, after he got out of rehab, he cleaned up his life and changed his name. I know, because I was there when he got out. He called me while he was in there, and he told me that he was sorry for all the times he was ever mean to me. Then, he went off and became Jack, and I never saw him again. I’ve met up with him a few times, but since he turned into Jack, he’s not the same anymore. He says he doesn’t remember me, and that I should stop telling everyone that I know him because, clearly, I do not.
            "Jack is a good guy. I can’t deny that. He takes care of his (third? or fourth?) family and does everything he’s supposed to do. He goes to work, pays his bills, satisfies the wants and needs of his children, and his women adore him (which, when you recall his dalliance with Winnie Richards, it makes sense that he would chase down a woman who doesn’t want to be found; I mean, how could anyone resist such a charmer as Jack?) But Jack can’t hide from me. I know who he used to be, and eventually, everyone’s sins come back to haunt them—precisely because the guilt they live with continues to resurrect itself from the dead, announcing his eventual return to judge the remaining few who survive the ever-rushing currents of time and space. He rejected me and everything I was trying to tell him along the way. He considers himself above everyone else because he was able to kick some bad habits, but like they say in Narcotics Anonymous—you only replace your addictions, you never kick them. I say that’s bullshit. I say that you have to turn around and face me, learn your lessons and then look forward with pride, not sadness, for the day to begin; otherwise, you’ll be chasing that shot with something else worse."
           ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
            Once he’d read the sick, purple-tinged note over a few times, Don crumbled it up, ready to throw it away in the trash. However, he second-guessed the impulse. He wondered what Ruth would think about this one. He knew that she must have come across some of these crazy fan letters over the years. He chuckled to himself as he remembered her novel “My Year of Meats”—man, she really took a beating on that one, from all the meat-loving maniacs out there in the cyber world. He folded the letter up to its maximum eight folds and shoved it into his pants pocket, where the impact against his keys and the loose change shook it open slightly as it bounced back and forth against his thigh.  As he gathered himself just before leaving the door, he patted his leg and letter; and barring the sheath of his pant leg, they danced in synchrony with the rest of his routine heading out the door to begin his day.
            Don had been scheduled for an interview today; interestingly enough, it was arranged by Ruth, herself. She contacted Don a few weeks back to ask him if he was interested in a pet project between her and a student from a small college on the west coast.  Don hesitated at the idea. He didn’t know this person who would be interviewing him today. He asked Ruth where she’d met her, where did she come from, and Ruth simply replied that he should not worry about such things, she has everything under control. Trust her, she said. Don wasn’t so sure—he’d read Ruth’s last book and thought she was equal parts brilliant and mad, with mad almost being the winner by a nose. While that’s never a bad thing in the writer’s world, sometimes, he thought to himself, the writer’s world and the real world cannot exist simultaneously. He was worried about what world this interviewer would be living in; after all, it’s not like one can rely on the media to tell the truth about any one story. Oftentimes, news stories just all bleed into each other, like red socks in a whites-only load, infecting the brightness of clean, cotton bed sheets.  Ruth had mentioned that her name was Ella-something, but he wasn’t really listening past “newspaper interview”.  However, Ruth being such good friend of his, he didn’t want to seem disingenuous after all she had done for him before either one had found true success. 
            Ruth was sitting in the last bench in the far corner of the dimly-lit pizza parlor. Don was momentarily shaken by the neighborhood he’d driven into when he exited the freeway, and the sanguine-toned décor of the parlor further shook his nerves as we walked through the green wooden door. Why were there so many liquor stores within a few blocks? Why are we meeting here, anyway? He made his way over to Ruth, who was sipping from the brown soda inside the giant, hard-plastic cup. He sat down on the stiff bench, and nearly slid off from the high-glossed burgundy paint.
            “Why are we here, Ruth? Who is this person?”
            “Nice to see you too, Don. Would you like something to drink? They serve beer here, and I saw a couple of pool tables over in that back room, behind the bar area. I don’t expect Ella for at least another 30 minutes or so.”
            “Didn’t she say to meet her at this time, sharp?”
            “No, that was my request. I know Ella; she’s never on time for anything. I don’t expect her any time in the near future.” Ruth got up, picked up her drink and descended upon the jukebox in front of the entrance to the pool table area.  “Let’s just enjoy ourselves and this wonderful place—for the time being. Eh? Eh? I’m making a funny here, man. Loosen up!”
            Don wasn’t the least bit amused. He looked around the dining area. Over by the arcade games that lined the side wall leading to the exit, there sat a family of about 8, not including the parents. The older children were mirror images of the parents that sat opposite them—all illuminated by the glow of the screens directly in front of their noses. He imagined them all speaking in upper-cased letters to each other in glaring conversation, customary bouts of rebellion and anarchy between parents and teenage children. The younger children bounced about them, some playing on the programmed-game-play chirping and chattering away from its plastic and aluminum bounding projecting off the wood paneling of the walls. The glowing beer signs emanated from above the bar and the order and pick-up windows. Customers were flowing in and out of those windows, obviously having ordered previously and picking up their meals to take home. He couldn’t blame them for not wanting to be here. It was dreary and cold, and felt more like a wide-scale dive than a family restaurant. BUT…the smell of that pizza. Angels could fight a hundred apocalyptic wars from insecticide to regicide, wipe out a thousand civilizations begging for mercy against a God that hates them, and rebuild them all again into perfect utopias of balanced joy and rage, and STILL never produce a scent as glorious as the one that wafted from the broiling stoves of that parlor.
            “Don, come on. She’s not gonna be here right now. Just relax and wait for her to arrive. I ordered food already, let’s have a beer and shoot some pool,” Ruth called from the bar. Don smiled, and took a deep breath. Come on, man. Lighten up, and smell that pizza. You should be relieved that it’s a place like this. Or have you bought into the consumer desire culture? Do you crave the finer things in life more than you could appreciate the quiet, darkened noise of a place like this? Smell that pizza, man. Creative uniformity could never produce a smell like that one.
            “Don! Are you listening to me? Don? Don!” Ruth was halfway off her bar stool calling out to Don, who was still entranced by the twinkling sounds enticing him from the walls. He spotted Centipede, Space Invaders, Galaga… the games of his younger days when technology was still exciting to a child, and a handful of quarters would have the kids out of the house for an afternoon… to come to a place like this?
            “Hold on, Ruth. I see that Centipede game calling my name over there. Let me just get one game in and then we’ll shoot some pool.”
            “Okay, then. Let me watch you get your wrinkly hands get stuck in that roller ball.”
            Don chuckled, finally breaking a smile as they both headed over toward the Centipede machine, where Ruth detoured toward the change machine. Don had a few quarters in his pocket, and—oh, the letter!
            “Hey, Ruth? There was something I wanted to show you, something I received this morning in the mail. I know you get stuff like this all the time, so I was wondering how you would handle something like this.”
            “Like, what?” Ruth hollered from the entrance of the parlor where the change machine was located. “Do you need any change?’
            “Well, I got this letter in the mail from some deranged fan. I figured since you write all those crazy, magical-realist stories you must get these crazies that really believe your characters are real.”
            “What makes you think they’re not real, Don?” Ruth responded. “I think they’re real. I mean, look at them. Everyone talks about them like they’re real people, and you can get actors to play them, what else is left to make them real?”
            “But wait, Ruth. Look at this letter. I have it here in my pocket.”
            Don fished around in his pockets, but now the letter wasn’t there. I could’ve sworn I put it in my pocket, didn’t I?
            “ORDER READY FOR NUMBER 13 ORDEN LISTO PARA NUMERO TRECE!” bellowed the portly bearded man from the pick-up counter.
            “Oh, that’s our order! You have to try this pizza, Don. It’s fantastic. It’s the best pizza you’ll ever know—and that’s because we’ve had our share of New York Pizza. Check this out, Don—they shred the pepperoni! It’s amazing!”
            Don was disoriented, and he didn’t hear anything Ruth said. Where the hell is that letter? It was here, in my pocket. I put it there, I remember doing so. Did I drop it outside? That’s it, it’s out by the car, and Don was ready to rush out the door to his car, to find the letter, find where he was, why he’d agreed to come here, why this place wasn’t familiar, why, why, why
            “Oh, wait, look. Ella’s here. Wow, if she ever came at just the right time. Come sit down, Don. Everything is gonna be alright. Seriously. Have some pizza.”

            Don composed himself and took a deep breath, facing away from the women who proceeded to greet each other profusely, as if they were old relatives from some obscure familial bond. He sat down at the table next to Ruth, and opposite the person called Ella, slowly trying to digest who she was-- pale skin, light brown, almost blonde hair, black-rimmed glasses. He watched her as she drew out a tape recorder, a pair of  thinner-rimmed eyeglasses, a blue Chicago Bears pen, and a yellow highlighter. He drew a piece of pizza from the steaming tray, the scent bearing down and eliminating all sensory perceptions, save for the olfactory—until Ella pulled the notebook out of her bag and opened it, revealing the tinges of purple in the corners of the paper inside.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Email.

“Did you get my email?” she asked.
“Which one?” he sighed.
“The one I last sent you… and I don’t appreciate your tone.”

He rolled his eyes, the same way he rolled them over every word, every scold, and every back-handed compliment she’d ever written.

“Yes, I got it.”
“Well, what did you think?”
“Think? I’m not allowed to think. You do all the thinking for me.”
“What does that mean?”

“Did you get my email?”
“What email? You never send me email.”
“It’s probably in your junk. You know—where my head always seems to be.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“Nothing. I wasn't thinking when I said it.”
“You seem to never be thinking at all.”
“I know, it’s not allowed.”

“So, are you ever going to give me an answer?”
“I don’t think so.”
“Why?”
“Did you read my email?”
“No, I didn't.”

“I’m still stuck in your junk.”

--Ella Draven, 11/13/2014

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Balloons-- 2nd Place Winner of Library Club Poetry Contest-- November 2012.

BALLOONS
by Ella Draven

Your words are balloons.
Your pneumatic yarns fill your rubber bags of color,
Expanding their size and giving them rise.
I run to catch them while you run off to catch another,
And you still want me to hold on to your balloons.

This new bunch is so beautiful!
They move about with the slightest gust, touching and rubbing each other,
They whisper sweet moans from the painful friction,
Their wanton cavorting is enough to fill me with hot air
And give in to the proposition of this dubious affair.

But your words are balloons.
The pneumatic currents will just blow them away.
 The heat will warp and expand those sacs until
They explode into bits of take-backs and alibis,
And I will be left with the carcasses of elastic lies.

But you still offer only balloons. 
You invite me to the party that no one attends.
The balloons invite me to their waltz, yet my feet are full of lead.
The streamers and lights are so festive, and they cause me to ache.
There is nothing to celebrate when promises break.

So keep your balloons.
  My words flow to the rhythm of the zephyr;
I marvel at their beauty as they fly with grace.
I bid them farewell as they move west of Forever,
As they ride along gently with the pneumatic pace.
So I will leave you to your endless race.
No, you won’t ever see my face:
I’m too busy… releasing my own balloons.



My Vision...


My Vision
by Ella Draven

As I stepped out the door, waiting to encounter new adventures for the day

I met with a familiar object- my heart stopped and it took my breath away

It brought the memory of excitement and anticipation for the new

So I forgot the urgency of the moment and took a much better view

Its ebony tone and its non-imposing fascia reminded me of my ease

How the serenity of your presence quelled the shaking in my knees

I walked about its perimeter, looking for any identical sign

That would tell me you were here, and I could leave the day behind

We'd go out chasing rainbows to find the elusive pot of gold

Then travel the galaxies together, until we were frail and old

We'd uncover great new mysteries, and share them with our kind

Then return to the great unknown, and see what's left for us to find

You would teach me of the future, and I'd remind you of the past

For when these lessons merge together, the fields of wisdom are vast

The sun would at last retire, and the moon would make her regal rise

We'd lie hand-in-hand looking towards the skies

Listening to the songs of the wolves' amorous cries

Then you'd look into my eyes

And I'd see no better prize

Than the stillness of the night and the warmth from your embrace

The indulgence of satisfying our desires for each other's taste

Enveloped in the reverie of discovering one last feat

The finding of that one that makes your life complete.......


Just as I felt the sweet taste of you upon my lips

The firmness of your hands set upon my hips

As you drew me closer and I touched the heavens and divine

We'd declare with certainty that I was yours and you were mine

Time and space would wash away to openness and bliss

And I'd know right then I 'd want no other kiss...


But my vision was broken with the sound of a growl

It was the object dashing off, leaving only its echoing howl

I recalled the reality of time, and that you're not here yet

There are milestones that still must be met

But I will walk that path, slow and steady in my way

Knowing that I'll get to you that one fine day

And when I do, there will be no question or doubt in my mind

That you are the one I was always meant to find.



(Fear not my words, they will not suffocate nor leave you behind

They are only ideas and dreams-- the life's-blood of my kind.)

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Domino Effect

THE DOMINO EFFECT
 by Ella Draven

            Danny could hardly contain his excitement.  His anticipation for this day had been building for four months and now October 25th was here. Danny and his three best friends, Marco, Sam, and Cesar, were loading up Marco’s multi-colored Civic hatchback, just about ready to leave for Andalusia, Alabama, for the World Championship Domino Tournament. The four friends had gotten together many nights under many moons to talk, joke, and argue while playing dominoes in Cesar’s garage. Danny and his boys had been friends since elementary school, and they all looked so much alike—short, faded haircuts, medium-brown skin, skinny builds with long arms and legs—that most people thought they were brothers. They had attended the same schools all the way up through high school, and even had their graduation pictures taken together.  They’d always said that they would marry quadruplet girls and have one big wedding together; and Marco’s mother even joked that their first children would probably all be born on the same day.   
There were many times when Marco had given Danny rides to school, or when Sam had invited him over for dinner when Danny’s parents didn’t make it home most nights, or when Cesar had given him a place to crash when the drama got to be too much. This was Danny’s opportunity to pay them back for all the times they’d been there for him and made him feel like he was still a part of someone’s family instead of an employee. Also, he felt the time had come to test their skills as professional dominoes players—and to take a long-needed vacation from living under the enormous shadow cast by an ever-present ghost.
Bobby, Danny’s older brother, worked with their father, Roberto, for a small gardening business. He was prized by his Danny’s parents, especially Roberto, for being such a hard worker; even after dropping out of school at 15 to work full-time.  Danny was the scholar of the family who brought home good grades, art awards and special recognitions for his citizenship and humanitarian services, but still felt like he lived in Bobby’s shadow.  His mother Delia’s adoration was always just out of reach-- while Bobby was greeted with smiles and affection every day after work, Danny would come home to a sandwich on the table and Delia talking on the phone. There was a huge dinner and celebration with aunts and uncles when Bobby gained three new clients for the business, but only a handshake when Danny graduated as the valedictorian for his middle school class. Although that dark space in Danny’s sunlight was vast, he never felt anger towards his big brother. He looked to Bobby as a hero just like any little brother would; he followed him around, waiting for the chance to be like Bobby.
During the summer before his 15th birthday, Danny’s nubile curiosity led him into sneaking out to follow Bobby and his girlfriend, Josie, to an abandoned tract of land filled with trees. He wanted to scare them as he often did when Roberto and Bobby came home from work every night. He climbed a large tree a few yards from where Bobby and Josie lay, and quietly jumped from limb to limb until he found one directly over the kissing lovers. As he made silent gagging faces while they sucked face, what Danny discovered next wove a secret into his psyche that froze his orbit of earth: the image of his big brother drawing a needle and a tiny envelope, shimmering in the moonlight, from the utility pocket of his green cargo shorts. In the dark Danny couldn’t make out what the envelope contained, but when Josie tied a ribbon to Bobby’s arm while Bobby burned a spoon with his lighter, the bright fire melted away Danny’s doubts into the clear liquid. Bobby shot up into his arm with the needle and then, rolling up the sleeve on Josie’s red shirt tight enough to serve as a tourniquet, and did the same to her. 
Danny sat quietly on his bough above their heads as they slumped down, catching his tears so they wouldn’t rain down over their euphoria.  He watched as they did this 3 more times during the night, until they’d both stopped moving.  When it seemed like they’d fallen asleep, Danny slowly climbed down and sat down Indian-style between the two lifeless bodies holding hands.  He turned to look at their sinking faces, holding his hand over their mouths and feeling no breath.   He hugged his legs, allowing his tears to saturate his dirty jeans, and looked up at the giant tree over them. He saw their initials surrounded by a jagged heart carved into the tree: RM+JC. Danny got up and punched the carving in the tree until his knuckles bled, and kicked Josie’s corpse in the stomach, screaming, “I hate you! I hate you! I hate you….”

Danny worked every day the last six months running the business he helped build with Roberto after he graduated from high school. Roberto, his father, lost his job with the gardeners after his depression accelerated his drinking habits, so he began to work for himself. Once Danny had joined the family business, he expanded beyond gardening to full landscaping, and now had begun a new venture in brush and tract clearing. An old friend of Roberto’s had thrown their names in for bid on a contract with an up-and-coming Lamborghini dealership to clear tracts of land for 3 locations.  After winning the bid and negotiating the deal, Danny hit pay dirt and could not only pay for all their entries, but also a road trip from L.A. to Andalusia. Of course, he would have to do much of the work since his Roberto was more interested in how many bottles of Buchanan’s Scotch he could afford now with this big payoff.  Roberto’s priorities of being a husband and father had changed along with Delia’s, and now they would be much too busy with feeding their ever-growing addictions. 
When Danny reached the final tract, he found that it was the open land where Bobby’s tree was. The client had asked for this particular tract be cleared of all its trees save for one—the tree with the carving of the initials.  The eccentric client wished to keep it because she valued the sentiment of such a carving and thought it would bring good luck to her business. I wouldn’t bet on that, Danny thought to himself.
  When the clearing of the land was complete, Danny reflected on the sole tree drooping with sorrow after having witnessed all its brothers chopped down and thrown into the wood chipper. He noticed the branches eerily swaying, as if to reach for their family’s remains, whose trunks were piled and ready to be sold for firewood. Trees don’t have feelings, he thought. It’s my guilt for clearing such a beautiful space, and I’m tired as hell. My eyes are just playing tricks on me. He ran his hand over the carving, remembering the sirens and flashing lights, the gurneys and black bags, and the anguished weeping from his mother. He felt the pulse of pressure in his foot when he recalled the sandbag-impact of meeting his black Chuck Taylor shoe to Josie’s stiffening gut. “I hate you! I hate you! I hate you…” every syllable moved through his mind, and thumped the ball in his throat to the rhythm. Good riddance. Maybe this is the closure I need.
Goodbye Bobby, he imparted to the tree one last time.
  
The night Danny had told the boys about the tournament, he’d taken them all out to dinner at El Tepeyac and ordered Manuel’s monster burritos and beers for all.  Marco had been surprised to see Danny pick up the whole check and had asked what the deal was.
“Well amigos, I have some news that will finally get you all to shut your big trompas,” Danny said proudly.
“What,” Sam said with a smirk, “You found a viejita who wants to make you her boy toy and leave you all her money when she dies?” The other guys cackled in unison.
“No, but I might find one in Andalusia, because that’s where we’re all going,” Danny retorted, beaming with pride.
The three friends all stopped laughing, and turned to stare at Danny. He pulled out the tickets and paperwork for the tournament. They passed the papers around to each other, each touching their names on the contracts like they were etched in gold.
“Holy shit, Danny!” Cesar finally responded, still in utter shock at the news. “How the hell did you manage to pull this off…? Hold on… Is this why we haven’t seen much of you throughout the summer?”
“Yup! This is my gift to you all, and a chance to finally put your money where your mouths are. Now, stop staring at me like you all want to make out with me, and let’s celebrate!”
            Before the celebration began, he had them all sign their final contracts.  The following morning, Danny mailed out their paperwork. It’s official.
            For the next few weeks, they spent every night in Cesar’s garage playing dominoes and plotting their strategy. When the day had finally arrived, the boys were loading up the tiny car when Marco’s mother came out, her hands full with the lunch bags she prepared for her boys.  Danny’s mouth began to water when he smelled the salt-seasoned aroma of the beans coming from his burritos in the brown sack.
 “Estan listos, hijos?” she asked.
            “Si, Ma, we’re ready. You didn’t put garlic in mine, did you? Last time I bit into the ajo, and my breath smelled for a week,” Marco whined from under the hood of the car.
            “That’s because you never brush your teeth, cochino!” Sam yelled from the backseat of the car, where he had been helping Cesar arrange their backpacks and Igloo chillers so they’d all fit inside the car. After they had a good laugh at Marco’s expense, and Marco’s mother had given them a bendicion for a safe trip, the four friends piled into the car.  The muffler gruffly scraped the ground as they backed out of the driveway and, with a good-bye honk and four skinny, brown hands waving from all windows, they were off.
            A few hours later, the drive was going better than Danny ever dreamed: they sang the songs they knew that came from the fuzzy radio, and even began making up new lyrics to songs they didn’t know or couldn’t hear over the buzzing.  Sam and Cesar sat in the backseat, planning their attack on the tournament, while Marco drove and Danny navigated. The boys had previously planned all the stops they would make along the way and were quite excited to get to the first destination point: Tempe, AZ. They were making good time, had just missed rush-hour traffic, and now the sun was beginning to set behind them.  Danny closed his eyes and leaned back in his seat, relishing the wind hitting his face from the half-open window.  He took a deep breath of the dry desert air and gazed out at the kaleidoscopic horizons of the oncoming Arizona desert—such amazing hues of orange, blue, and purple skies, the robust browns, reds, and grays of the desert, the brilliant yellow of the dead-end sign… Wait, dead end sign?
            “Marco, STOP!” Danny yelled out, and Marco slammed on the brakes.  Sam and Cesar, who had fallen asleep in the backseat, were suddenly jolted awake by the sound of the tires screeching and nearly catapulted through the windshield.
            “Danny, que te pasa, guey! What the hell is your problem? You almost made me crash into the ditch!”  Marco yelled, still panicked at almost becoming the meat in a metal sandwich.
            “Dude! You didn’t see that dead end sign? You’re going the wrong way!” Danny shot back. 
            What dead end sign? We’re on a HIGH-WAY!” Marco argued while he pulled over to the side of the road. “Look, pendejo—it says HIGH-W… Wait, where’s the sign?”
            They all jumped out of the car to look around. Danny ran back to look at the sign post and was confused when there was nothing posted on the sign. “What the hell is going on? This said ‘dead end’ before. Now it’s blank.”
            Cesar, irritated by having been awakened by near-death, ripped into Danny. “You’re supposed to be the navigator! How did you miss Marco driving off the highway?”
             “I didn’t drive off the highway! I haven’t gotten off anywhere. This dumb-ass is seeing things, and he’s trying to get us all killed!” Marco snapped back.
            Danny’s head began to spin, and he started to feel nauseous. “I SWEAR this sign said ‘dead end’… I don’t know what’s going on, but I don’t feel so welllll…” He felt his face and hands grow cold and, as his body crumpled and fell to the ground, the world turned white before his eyes.
            Brightness. Where is everyone?
            When Danny opened his eyes, he no longer saw his friends, the road, or the car. He awoke on the most comfortable bed he’d ever laid upon.  He slowly picked his head up from the cloud-like pillows and realized he was surrounded by gray, murky water.  He shot up all the way in the bed, bewildered as he looked around.  He was in a strange place, like a world he’d seen on a Dodo episode of Looney Tunes. The sky was a sick greenish-gray color, and his nose was swamped with the smell of hot metal and garlic that came up from the water that gently rippled beneath him.
            “Where the hell am I?” he said out loud, but there was no one around to answer him.
            He swung his feet around and off of the bed, and after feeling for solid ground between him and the low level of water, he stood up.  He began wandering around, looking for the guys.
            “Marco!” No response.
            “Sam!” Still nothing.
            “Cesar!” Dead silence.
            The ground began to slightly tremble and the water, which had previously only been slightly rippling, began to turn into larger waves, tossing around up to his knees. He held on to the bedpost to keep from falling into the water.  Once the shaking died down a little and he gained his footing, he began wandering around. He was scared to death of this foreign place, worried for his missing friends, wanting to find someone—anyone—who could give him answers. Becoming increasingly frustrated, he began yelling out into space at no one.
            “Where am I? Is there anyone here? What am I doing here! Someone please tell me what the fuck is going on! Can anyone hear me! Answer me, God Dammit!” Danny’s throat began to tighten, around the lump that formed. What will Delia think if no one finds me? What about Roberto? Everything I worked for will be washed away. I have to find a way out of here.
            Suddenly, he heard the faint sound of a woman’s voice singing a shrill tune and began running toward where he thought it was coming from.  With the ground trembling under his feet and the sky beginning to turn red, he ran and ran for what seemed like hours. He looked down and realized that the water began to turn a dark blood-red in reflection of the sky.  He gasped loudly and began to run faster. He ran so fast he covered an extraordinary amount of ground in only a few minutes. The ground stopped shaking, and the sudden stop nearly knocked Danny off his feet. As he stopped to regain his balance, that’s when he saw the woman.
            She levitated in the sky while lying on an enormous clock with no hands.  She had long, black hair with pale grayish skin, and wore a red, sheer curtain over the mid-portion of her body. She was still singing, softly and slowly, and Danny inched closer to the red shadow her bed-clock cast on the swaying water. He stretched his ears to try to figure out what she was singing, but he still couldn’t make it out. As he drew closer, he began to make out the woman’s face. Josie?
            “Josie! What are you doing here? Why aren’t you dead?”
            Josie didn’t seem to respond to Danny’s questions; in fact, her song got louder.   
            “Excuse me,” he shouted, “I don’t want to interrupt you but, can you tell me where I am, and how to get back to my friends?” When she gave no sign that she’d heard him, he continued.  “Can you hear me at all? Where’s Bobby? Tell me!”
            The volume rose louder, and louder, till she hit a piercing note that stung his eardrums.  Danny covered his ears and tried to run back to the bed, but couldn’t find it.  As he went into full panic mode, with his breath beginning to run out and his heart beating out of his chest, he looked back to see if he’d made any distance from the screaming Josie, and SPLAT! He ran right into a giant tree. He fell on his back and made a slapping splash in the bloody garlic water. He looked up at what he had run into and immediately recognized Bobby’s tree from the newly-cleared tract. As he gawked at the tree, it lowered its branches down around him tightly and enveloped him until he was completely covered in its leaves.   Now completely terrified, he knelt down in the water, unable to run, his tears streaming from his fear-stricken face and making ringlets in the small waves.  Danny turned to face the trunk and his face met with the carving right in his face: RM+JC. Danny shrieked out as loud as he could, and began scratching at the carving, ripping off the bark piece-by-piece, yet the carving wouldn’t disappear. The vines enclosed him tighter until he was pressed against the tree.
            “God, please, get me out of here. I swear, I will never kill another tree again, just please let me live. I don’t want to die yet.”  Danny wanted to close his eyes but feared he would never wake up again, so he struggled to keep them open while his vision blurred away. He began to feel faint and nauseous again, and as he faded into darkness, he saw the blur of a pair of green shorts before him.
            “Bobby, it’s dark. Help me. Am I dead?”
            ‘No, you’re not. You have to go back, Danny. Take care of Mami and Pops. They need you.’
            “No! I need you, Bobby! Please, come back…”

Danny woke up again, this time to a slow beeping sound, and found himself in a hospital room. He tried to get up, but felt detached from his body, and he couldn’t move an inch.  He looked around, and realized his head hadn’t moved, just his eyes. He smelled the familiar scent of perfume, beer, and grass. I’m Home, he thought. He inched his eyes over to the corners as much as he could, and saw Delia sleeping on a cot next to him, while Roberto was snoring, with his head tilting way back, in a chair. Danny wanted to get their attention, but couldn’t talk or move. He tried to wiggle around, to get something to move, but nothing was working.
            An elderly doctor walked into his room, and gently tapped Roberto on the shoulder.  He woke with a jolt and a long snort, and then leaned over to wake Delia.  He could only hear muffled words from the doctor, as if he was speaking through a wall. He tried screaming out, but he could only hear his words in his head. I’m here! I’m alive! Look, my eyes are open. Look at me!
            Delia began to cry, and Roberto wrapped his arms around her. The doctor walked over to the side of the bed, and began reading a metal clipboard hanging from his bed.  He desperately tried to move a finger, a toe, his nose, anything. Why can’t he see that my eyes are open?
The doctor scribbled something down on the clipboard, and laid it on Danny’s lap while he felt his legs. Danny began to really panic when he could see the doctor touching him, but couldn’t feel anything. When he finally accepted that he could not move, he diverted his eyes to the clipboard on his lap. He read the underlined words that the diagnosis sheet screamed from the metal clipboard:
            Quadriplegia: severe damage to cervical spinal column. Concussion. Sole survivor of highway accident. Prognosis: unclear.
            Delia sat beside Danny and held his hand between hers and wept. I can feel that! Danny thought to himself. This isn’t permanent! I am going to make it...


            “You hear me, Bobby? I’m going to make it!”

Monday, March 18, 2013

The Blood Paladin


The Blood Paladin
by Ella Draven
“Just one more, Cherry.”
“Anything you like, Dee,” Cherry responded in her raspy voice, and poured him a Jack and Coke.  Damien’s position was situated next to the corridor that led to the bathrooms, while blocking the way for a stray customer to wander behind the bar.   He could mind the bar when Cherry was gone, and keep an eye on bathroom traffic. 
The night was shaping up to be a bustling Thursday.  Cherry could hardly keep up with all the rough-neck Chevron employees who patroned after their shifts.  Not far behind were the secretaries who worked the high-rise buildings.  Every so often, Damien would see the rare ball-busting business woman leave with a roughneck.  He usually avoided such a crowd, but it was all part of the job he did for Cherry, who never minded the rowdy company and enthusiasm to spend their fat paychecks. 
The drunken chorus of laughing was violently interrupted by a loud bang, followed by the screech of metal scraping the tiled floor. One of the stools had fallen over at the bar, followed by a roar of laughter from two roughnecks sitting in a dark corner.  The noise brought Damien out of the trance of watching a basketball game.  He’d been quietly observing a lady in a red suit and black heels. She’d been drinking all night with the two roughnecks in the corner. Obviously intoxicated, she stood up and stumbled while picking up the barstool. Wow, she’s hammered, Damien thought.
The women who frequented the bar mostly looked alike, but this one had pallid skin and scarlet lips that seemed unusually bright in the blue lighting of the neon beer sign. She was young with apparent poor judgment.  Damien witnessed as the wolves circled the weak lamb sitting lop-sided on her barstool.  As much as he despised these loose secretaries, he still did his best to keep them safe from being harmed by the overly-anxious bastard. 
Cherry rang her cowbell, signaling the last call.  Damien walked the bar area, announcing closing time.  He kept vigil on the lady, making sure she didn’t leave, while making mental notes on what the men looked like-- both had dirty Chevron work shirts; one was  a fat blonde with a sharp cleft chin, the other a fat Latino man with dark skin, receding salt-and-pepper hair, and streaks of  silver in his goatee. They shared the stench of beer and refinery grime. The lady, unable to keep her balance, fell over again. Damien affronted the trio.
“Fellas, I think the lady has had enough, so we’re going to call her a cab.”  She gave him a chilly look when Damien tried to help her stand up on her own. She leaned into him, putting her face in his neck and drawing a deep gasp that chilled his spine. He was unnerved by this, and by how cold her skin was to the touch. “Miss, can I see some ID, or can you call someone to get you home?”
“NO!” the lady shouted out, and her eyes were furiously fixed in Damien’s, who was startled by her sudden fierceness. He looked into her eyes, and felt the chill again.
She calmed as quickly as she’d burst. “It’s puurrrfectlee fine, zhee? Theezhe are my good, good friendzh,” she slurred, then cackled hysterically. 
The blonde man smirked and replied, “We’re old friends.  She’s in good hands with us, and we’ll take good care of her, won’t we Carlos?”
“Oh yeah, good care,” Carlos replied with his own sinister grin.
The lady slurred, “Zhee? We, are all good here. Now, run along and leave us alone.”
“The bar is closed. You have to leave,” Damien huffily replied.  These girls will always be whores, no matter what I do to save them.
“Let’s go boys,” the lady slurred. “Let’s continue this party somewhere else, where we won’t be… distuuurbed.” She stumbled out of the bar and cackled all the way out the door.
Damien spent the next hour quietly cleaning and straightening up the bar, while Cherry counted the till.  She could see he was still ruffled by the lady; so she tried to console Damien as they locked up for the night.
“Don’t worry about it. She’s a grown woman. You can’t go around thinking you can save everyone, doll.  Some people just don’t want to be saved.”
After a short walk, Damian arrived at the motel where he lived and took his key from the manager.  He dragged his tired feet up to the second floor.  As he fumbled with the key, his eyes caught the curtain ruffling. Nobody could be in my room—only the manager has keys. He took one step inside his room, switched on the light, and gagged at the sight.
The walls were dripping with fresh blood, with chunks of flesh and intestinal tracts splattered on the walls. Human hands and feet were in small piles on both night stands, the palms and soles were facing up and gnawed away to the bones.  The nails had been pulled out and scattered around the bed, like murderous peanut shells to adorn a night of festive gorging. The mattress was ripped in the middle and held a two human torsos, rib cages broken and ripped open, and deep scratch marks on the skin around the bones.  Blood dripped from the ceiling over the bed, and onto his jacket.
Something was feasting in my room.
 He drew his breath suddenly when he heard a small grunt, followed by faint but heavy breathing.  He slowly moved towards the closet, where limbs were on hangers, bent at the joints, gnawed through to the skin and sinew. The coppery stench of the coagulating blood burned Damien’s nostrils as he struggled to contain his nauseous heave.  He could still hear the labored grunting, and he inched toward the bathroom door.  He pushed it open to find an old elven hag masticating on a kidney. She was wearing a red suit that hung from her haggard frame, and high heels that were gigantic on her bony chicken-feet. Her face no longer was that of a young lady, but of a demonized child.  Her skin had turned ashy and grayish-blue, and her hands had become sharp, black claws. She began to hiss at Damien, and leapt out at his neck.  Damien struggled, but she sunk her claws into the juicy vein. He cried out when her teeth clamped down on his neck, and in the burst of pained adrenaline he ripped her off. She came with a piece of his neck skin in her mouth, blood dripping from her jagged jaws. 
The demon writhed in Damien’s grasp as he wrestled her to the ground and shoved his arm against her neck to strangle her. He looked into her eyes and felt the same chill as he had back in the bar.  He weakened as the blood gushed out, but he grabbed her head with both hands and jerked them as forcefully as he could until he heard the crack of her snapped neck. The demon crumbled to the floor, then burst into a bluish flame that quickly burned down to ash. Damien slumped down as well, feeling his head become light and foggy. 
Damien looked around to find something to stop the bleeding until he saw a pile of rumpled, bloody clothes on the floor next to the bed. He crawled over and picked up one of the shirts, which had a name embroidered above the pocket: Carlos.   As he held it to his neck, trying to stop the bleeding, he saw a tuft of blonde hair under the bed. He leaned down and saw the bloodshot eyes of the roughnecks, staring back at him.  He gasped and rolled away from the bed.  The guys from the bar, Damien thought as he drifted off.
Damien was awaked by pounding from the door. He looked around the room. Why is everything so clean?  He looked at his reflection in the mirror as he got up and realized he was no longer bleeding—the bite was completely gone.
“Uh, Can I help you, Officer?”
“Son, we’ve been receiving reports of some kind of disturbance coming from your room. Is there something wrong with you?” the belligerent old cop replied.
“Uh…Yea, I’m fine. I just uh, I had a rough night.”
“Alright well, if you got some aggression to work out, I recommend the 24-hour gym down the street.”
Damien acknowledged his advice and shut the door. He touched his neck and felt nothing. He looked into the dresser mirror again, and spotted the dirty Chevron shirts on the floor. He spun around and dove for the floor next to the bed. He grabbed the shirt, and saw the name Carlos above the blood-stained pocket. His eyes darted up at his reflection in the mirror and howled wildly at the image of the smiling demon with the Chevron shirt in his hands.  

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

The Last Letter.


The Last Letter
by Ella Draven

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


~~~  Stephanie fumbled in her purse, looking for her keys. She hated that she always seemed to lose them when she was in the biggest hurry. She wanted to leave before anyone tried to stop her, even though she really doubted anyone would. She was a fool to have shown up to the party in the first place. Stephanie always had the lurking feeling that Marcus’ friends didn't care too much for her, and thought she was weird. She didn’t care about any of that, though. Marcus was her friend before he was super famous, and he knew that. She knew him long before the groupies knew anything about him, and loved him more than he knew.  
     Just as she’d found her round keychain and pushed the key in the lock, she faintly saw someone coming through the fog. She absent-mindedly opened the car door while trying to find the face of the figure, hoping it was Marcus.  Please, let it be Marcus, let him have come to find me, she whispered to herself.
     But it wasn't Marcus.  The figure was Marcus’ sister Diana, with her boyfriend Carlos following closely behind. Stephanie lowered her sappy, hopeful look, got into the car and slammed the door. Diana skipped quickly in her stilettos over to her window before Stephanie could drive away, and started tapping on the glass.
     “Stephanie!!! Talk to me!! What happened? Where are you going?” Diana asked her through the glass. Stephanie turned the keys in the ignition but didn't start the car. She looked up at Diana, who was still tapping and screaming into the window, and lowered her resistance. She hit the button to open the window.
     “I have to go, I’m sorry Diana. I know I probably ruined the party but I can’t be here, I just can’t stand to see this.” Stephanie's voice shook and cracked, and she tried hard to hold back her tears.
     “Wait, what? Stephanie, what are you talking about? See what?” said Diana, her growing concern for Stephanie becoming apparent as the pitch in her voice went higher at the end of each question.  Diana didn't see Stephanie drink anything, but she still was worried about her driving around tonight. She didn't want her to drive home alone-- it was Super Bowl Sunday and the cops were sure to be out and prowling for DUIs.
     “I can’t see him do it anymore, Diana. I've seen too much, I’ve heard too much, and it all just hurts." The tears started to come, but Stephanie wasn't trying to hide it anymore.  "I know that it was wrong, but I fell in love with Marcus. I realize it now more than ever, but he just doesn't care.  He is never going to want me in return, and I've been too blind to see it. I’m sorry Diana, but I have to go now.” Stephanie turned the ignition to fire up the engine, rolled up her window and began to back out of the parking space. Diana backed away from where she stood to give her space. Stephanie sped off down the street, while Diana stood in the cold and fog, shocked to the bone by Stephanie's revelation.
     “Stephanie loves Marcus… How could I have not seen it before?” she said sadly as Carlos walked over to her and put his coat on her shoulders.


~~   When Stephanie got home, she kicked off all the glitz and glamour she piled onto herself earlier that night. Here she was, looking like Cocktail Waitress Barbie, and the whole time Marcus never really cared whether she was there or not. She walked into her bathroom, sat down on the toilet lid and began taking off her makeup. She let out a long sigh, ashamed of the glittery image in the mirror, and started to cry. What have I become? She thought to herself.
     Stephanie showered, allowing all her pain and sorrow to fall down into the drain. After she shook out her hair and drew her journal from between her bed mattresses, she began to write. She didn't really focus so much on what she was writing, but on all the pain she was in at that moment.  She thought of all the good times they shared, the nights they spent just talking forever about everything they loved, and even the night she spent looking into his eyes. She remembered his hockey days and the times she’d help him lug his equipment around. She even remembered when her car spit out antifreeze liquid all over her suit after her car accident—a  “slight miscalculation,” as Stephanie called it—and Marcus was there to help her get her car towed, and took her home afterward. 
     Then she remembered all the bad days. Those were the days of being introduced to girlfriends, and the subsequent feeling of abandonment when the text messages, pictures and the funny notes all stopped.  Marcus would cease to exist in Stephanie's life when there was an aspiring actress waiting in his wings. Stephanie hated them and the way they would pretend to like what he liked just so they could keep him.  She hated their fake, suspicious attitudes whenever she came to visit. Maybe one could say they were right to fear her… at least, that’s what she used to think.
     Now I see this clearly, she said to herself as she stared down at the scribble she’d written. She read it over a few times to make sure she was clear, and then she pulled out her laptop. As she turned on the machine, she kept considering whether she should do this by email.  After all this time, she could just tell him in person but she didn't trust herself. The moment she looked into his deep, coffee-brown eyes, she would melt and forget all she wanted to say.  No, she told herself, this way is better. She opened her word processor and began tapping away. The sun had risen by the time she had finished, and she was visibly tired, disheveled hair and bubblegum-pink eyes with trails of dried tears on her cheeks.  She read it over one more time, pressed Send, and fell down on her bed with tears in her eyes.


~~   The sound of Stephanie’s email alert woke Marcus from sleep. The sound of a car engine startled him, and after realizing he wasn’t about to be run down by a Ford Truck,, he reached for his phone. He’d been waiting for it to ring all night.  He didn't know any of the details, but he knew that Stephanie had suddenly left the party and didn't tell him that she was leaving, or why. He wanted to go after her, but Rose was standing in the staircase and wouldn't let him pass. He spent the rest of the night getting hammered, and even though Rose was there and all his friends were laughing and cheering, he was miserable the entire night. It was supposed to be a fun night-- what the hell made it go so wrong?
     The phone buzzed in his hand with a call from Rose. Dammit, he thought. If Rose isn't here, then she took my car and drove herself home. He hesitated to talk to her, since the last conversation he’d had with her had been an argument last night right before the party had wrapped up. By the time the party was over, it was only he, Rose, and his buddies Choc and Robert who were left, and they'd been up drinking until Marcus passed out. He couldn't remember what exactly he and Rose were arguing about, but he could hear the shrill whine of her complaining still ringing in his ears.
     But-- she DID still have his car. He answered the call at the third ring. 
     
     “Good Morning, Sweetheart. Did you sleep off all that partying?” Rose said in a sugary-sweet voice.
     “Uh, yea, I think so. Good morning to you. Did you sleep off all that complaining?” said Marcus with a sharp sarcastic tone.
     “That’s uncalled for, Marcus. I was not complaining, I was pointing out the obvious.”     
                “And what’s that, Rose?”     
            
            “That you are too much of a flirt, and sometimes these girls, they get the wrong         idea.”     
            
            “What are you talking about, Rose? Who are ‘these girls’? What idea?”     
            
            “Oh come on, you know what I’m talking about. That friend of yours, Stephanie, she absolutely lost her mind last night. She started freaking out at the sight of you and me together, and she bolted out of the door. She told your sister that she ‘couldn’t stand it’ anymore and that she ‘loves you’. Come on now Marcus, what did you say to her that had her so convinced that you would be with her?”     
            
            “Stephanie?? What are you talking about, Rose? Stephanie doesn’t love me—I mean, she does, but in a best-buddy kind of way. You’re making it sound like she’s in love with me or something.”     
            
            “Well, you better talk to Diana, because she told Jessica, and Jessica told Sandy, and Sandy told Erica, and Erica told ME that Stephanie told Diana she was leaving because she couldn't stand to see you being with ME. She’s crazy, she’s probably all like, unbalanced and stuff. I mean, who in their right mind would think you would break up with ME over HER. That’s like, stupid.”     
            
             Marcus was starting to lose his patience. “Rose, did you do or say anything to her that would have embarrassed her in some way? You've been acting rather hostile towards Stephanie, and don’t think I haven’t noticed.  Did you do anything to cause this?”     
           
           “ME?? No, I didn't do anything to that little weirdo. Her face was just all twisted when you came down the stairs and I went to kiss you. She’s just a jealous stalker person who’s probably watching you while you sleep and she’s probably got pictures of you playing Xbox in your underwear.”     
           
           Marcus sighed heavily, exasperated to death with talking to Rose. He definitely had to cut this one loose.
     “Look Rose, I have to go, I will talk to you later… bring my damn car back.”     

Marcus hung up the call, and went back to his email. He saw the message from Stephanie: The Last Letter was the message title. He had his finger on the button to open the window when the phone rang again. He wanted to ignore the call, but this time it was Diana and Carlos smiling back at him. He answered the phone immediately.      
“Diana! What the hell happened? I just talked to Rose and—“      
“Oh Marcus, you’re such an idiot,” Diana responded without allowing Marcus to finish his rant. “What did you do say to Stephanie? Please tell me you didn’t run the same lame game on her.”      
“Diana, what the fuck are you talking about? What game? I didn’t do anything to that girl.  Rose just finished telling me that Stephanie freaked out when she saw Rose kiss me. She said that Stephanie told you that she’s in love with me. This makes no fucking sense, Diana. This doesn’t seem like the Stephanie I know,” Marcus replied. His mind was going a mile a minute, trying to understand Stephanie’s action.      
“Look Marcus, I don’t know what you said or did, but she’s plenty upset. She sped out of here like she was fleeing the scene of a crime,” Diana said, with Marcus noting hints of a harsh tone.
      
“What did Stephanie say, Diana? Tell me exactly what she said.”      
“She said she couldn’t stand the sight of watching you with other women. She said she was in love with you and she realized that you were never going to love her back, and that she had to go. That was it; she sped off after that.”      
Marcus sat with the phone in his hand, too stunned to answer. Stephanie said she was in love with me, he thought to himself. How could she think that I wouldn’t want her if she never told me how she felt?      
“Marcus, I’m your big sister.  I’ve seen you with plenty of girls, a lot more than I’ve ever cared to see. I’ll tell you, there’s no other girl that is there for you, and looks at you the way I’ve seen Stephanie look at you. She thinks you’re the greatest guy there is, and best of all, you trust her enough to be your best friend. The way I see it, you can either be her best friend, tell her the truth about how you feel and respect her feelings—Or, you can look inside yourself and really ask the tough questions: How much do you really love Stephanie, and do you want to be with her?”      
Marcus was silent while he was listening to everything Diana had to say. Of course, she had a point.  Maybe he hadn't been very fair to Stephanie; after all, there were the times when he would get too caught up with a new girlfriend and he would ignore her calls and text messages. He never meant to be mean to her; and he never wanted to hurt her feelings.      
“I hear you, Diana,” Marcus finally said. “I don’t really know what to feel right now, but I do know one thing- I don’t want to lose Stephanie, I don’t want her to be out of my life.”      
“That’s great, Marcus… but I’m not the one that you should be talking to. You have to find her and tell her the truth.”      
“I will Diana, and thank you. Tell Carlos I said hi.”      
“Will do, Marky… Love ya lots.”      
“Love you too, Di.”
     Marcus ended the call, and sat on the edge of his bed.  All the memories of Stephanie flooded his mind, all at once. How could he have missed her? Why didn’t she ever say anything?  He began to feel all the waves of guilt for having been so careless of her feelings. Wait, but she did tell me what she's feeling.

The Last Letter, Marcus suddenly remembered. Oh no

He picked up his phone and reopened the email window. As he read the email, his heart began to sink into his stomach.

     “Dearest Marcus,   
     
     “I wish I could just stop thinking about you. I wish I could just decide to stop caring, especially when I know I don’t need to be caring about you, and you don’t deserve my attention.  But dammit, I wish I did not love you, worry about you, and miss you.  I want to stop wishing you would call, I want to stop reading your one-word Facebook messages, I want you to just fucking want me back. Why is it so easy for you to dismiss me? Why are all these maniacs your preferred method of receiving love?
     
     “I can’t go on trying to make you see what you don’t want to see. I can’t go on wanting to be there all the time, and just waiting for the scraps you throw like I’m an old dog waiting for a meal. I don’t want to be angry with you, but I’m also frustrated because I can’t understand why you would ignore what it is that we have? If it really is nothing, please TELL ME!!! I don’t want to be some psycho either, at least not the kind that throws bricks through your windows.
     
      “My heart has bled all it can without losing the capacity to beat. I don’t want to end up someone that loses the will to love because I wasted it all on someone who couldn’t see what is standing in front of him. My life isn’t perfect, but neither is yours. I don’t have it all together, but neither do you. Why is it so wrong to still want you anyway?
     
     “I’m reading back at my own words, and I see how stupid this all is. What the hell am I doing, pining away for someone that doesn’t love me back? I’m making a damn fool of myself trying to convince you of something you don’t really want. You only come looking for me when you’re between whores and need someone to make you feel superior again, and you can look down at me, the poor nerdy girl and, in true nerd-fashion, I feel so great to be in your presence. When I met you so many years ago, you were the sweetest and most gifted guy I'd ever known. I wish I knew where that guy was now, I'd beg him to beat your ass and take his body back.

     “If you had to choose between being with me and never seeing me again, I know without a doubt in my mind that you’d choose the latter; because if you really wanted me, you would have been with me already. You’d be here now, and I wouldn’t be writing this stupid letter to you, or no one, or whoever the hell reads this one day.




“In my heart, though…. I don’t know if you would pick me. But I’d sure as hell be happy if you did, and I’d show you for the rest of your life.

--BFF

     Marcus closed the message window.  He was in shock—he had no idea that Stephanie felt this way.  He needed to speak to her, right now. Every minute that passed meant that Stephanie was losing her love for him, and he knew he didn't want to lose her. He pushed off his bed, got dressed in a flash and went for his keys. As he stood up he felt around in his front pocket, then the back, then his jacket.  "Where the fuck are my keys??” he said aloud to no one. He darted out of the bedroom to the end table in the hallway and yanked the drawer out of the cupboard, dropping all of its contents onto the floor. He pulled the spare keys out of the heap and dashed out the front door. 
     Then he realized: he didn’t have a car. Rose had his car. That silly bitch was the one who started this whole mess in the first place.
     Marcus dialed Stephanie’s number, impatiently waiting for the ring tone, but it was instead replaced by a dark voice shouting a code number. Great, she disconnected her phone. Marcus was starting to lose his mind. What do I do? How do I find her, how do I get to her? Wait—Choc knows where she lives. He dialed Choc’s number.

     “What’s up dawg? Where you gonna be at tonight? I heard it’s gonna be hella crackin over at Guiley’s. There’s gonna be all kinds of pretty lil’ thangs up in there!!!”
      “Nah man, I’m cool. Hey, do you remember that girl Stephanie? The one you dropped off that night after the movie?”
      “Yeah dawg, what about her?
      “I need you to tell me where you dropped her off."
     “Awww, You ain’t going after her, are you? Man, I already told you about her, she’s weirdo, dawg. You can find someone way better than that. Trust me, I know what I’m talki—“
     “Hey, shut the fuck up, okay? I called for her address, not your fucking opinion. Now are you going to give it to me or what?”

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