Dear you,
I am doing something major. I'm unbelievably nervous with this post. It's completely new to me. I've never publicly shared my fiction writing on this blog or with anyone but my closest friend Brie. She hasn't even read this story. This is a first to all of you and me! Be is a fictional novel I am writing. I am almost finished and have it all completed in my mind. This portion I'm going to let you read is just a small chapter in the middle of the story. The story is first person POV with different people and their points of view. This chapter is one of the lead character's (Atticus Wilson) POV. The other main character in this scene is Izzelle Finch (Atticus' best friend and next door neighbor). It's a very very very rough draft. The story and plot is explained in another post called "Be" so fill free to search for it if you'd like to discover the plot. The pictures above just sort of give you a feel of the setting and mood of the following chapter. Now the reason I am posting this, is because I WANT FEEDBACK. If you hate it or love it or would change anything or take anything away. Please! Tell me what you think! If you read this, I am serious I want to know how you feel about it. Please leave me a comment or send me an e-mail via Facebook or chrichar@isu.edu with your feedback. I know there are probably numerous grammatical errors, etc, but it's a rough draft. So here it is! I hope you like it or take something from it.
BE
Atticus
Do you ever wish you could be
someone else? Generally most of us would want to be someone famous or someone
you admire. I wished I was Anton. He had the world. He got the best Christmas
present conceivable, all that I wanted for Christmas… for forever. A green eyed
monster raged within me. I envied Anton with every cell in my body, every fiber
of my being, even though he was a jerk. In the end, he got the girl.
He’d already kissed Izzie more times
than I care to remember in the wretched play and now on Christmas Eve night, he
would be dancing with Izzie in his arms at Summer Morgan’s annual, lame might I
add, Christmas Ball. I could be there with Jocelyn. Josie begged me to go, and
truth be told, I wanted to attend… just not with her. This infuriated her. I
was brutally honest with her, as I am with everyone. She ended up breaking up
with me for Jonah, but it didn’t faze me. I didn’t care for her in the first
place.
Josie and I had some good times, but
I had greater times with Izzie, and Izzie wasn’t even my girlfriend. Now here I
was all alone on Christmas Eve, pathetically moping around feeling sorry for
myself. I glanced at my clock on the wall. Ironically, the time read 11:11. I
was one of those people who made a wish. I made the same wish I’d been making
for years. It hadn’t come true, who knew if or when it would, but I closed my
eyes, took a deep breath, and made the wish. Then I made a mental note to try
and find the origin behind the 11:11 thing.
My parents were with Izzie’s in
another city at some fancy party as always. Harper was sleeping peacefully
downstairs. Every other Christmas Eve was the same, minus this one because it
didn’t include Izzie. Normally, Izzie and I would be sitting in front of my
fireplace sipping white hot chocolate (Izzie’s choice), listening to Christmas
carols from my Ipod. Izzie’s favorite Christmas song was “This Christmas”. It
had been for as far back as I could remember. Mine was the joke version of “Jingle
Bells” or “December is for Cynics”. My reasoning being these songs were
humorous and sarcastic. I never understood why Izzie loved her song so much. I
plugged in my Ipod which contained as many versions of “This Christmas” as I
could find. I pushed repeat and listened to it over and over and over sung by
everyone from Beyonce to Justin Bieber. What happened to me? To Izzie? To
everything?
1 in 5,000 North American lobsters
are born bright blue. I should make a restaurant called Blue Lobster and put
Red Lobster out of business. Blue is better than red hands down.
What did that have to do with
anything? Nothing. It just proves how crazy I was going.
I paced the room. Maybe I should
just sleep. No. There was no way I’d be able to. My mind wouldn’t let me. I
walked absentmindedly over to the telescope Izzie gave me. I looked into the
lens and zoomed in on the dock. Snow was rapidly falling. It was like magic and
mesmerized me. No two snowflakes are alike on the outside but on the inside
they are just water, all of them, and will eventually melt. However, snowflakes
are one of nature’s most fragile things, but just look at what they can do when
they stick together.
A figure suddenly appeared in view.
I zoomed in closer and realized it was Izzie! She rushed to the end of the
dock. She seemed frantic. I could see her red ballet flats teetering near the
edge. Her red dress shined brightly in the light of the bay. She must be
freezing! She was absolutely breathtaking. A smile slowly played across my face
which quickly turned into a frown when Izzie jumped into the lake! Was I seeing
things? She couldn’t swim, deep water terrified her. She didn’t sleepwalk. One
word popped into my head: suicide. My heart stopped cold in my chest.
According to suicide statistics,
Monday is the favored day to do it. Firearms were the preferred method of most.
It was Saturday, but what day does it matter when someone is committing such a
horrible act you shouldn’t give a damn about anything but saving them!
Without another thought, I ran
faster than I ever had to the dock. I nearly tripped down the stairs. I flew
out the door, not bothering to close it. I didn’t know everything about
hypothermia, but I knew enough. I knew it was all about time. A person couldn’t
last very long in such cold temperatures. It was freezing outside. The lake was
nearly frozen in some spots. The water had to be below zero. Plus, Izzie couldn’t
swim to save her life, not that she would try, obviously. This truly was a life
or death situation.
I stopped for a moment when I
reached the edge of the dock. My head was spinning, racing, zooming, raging,
wild. I frantically unzipped my hoodie and threw it aside. I pulled my shoes
off and tossed them in the air. My heart was pounding. I was reluctant to jump
in. What if I died trying to save Izzie?
I jumped in.
Oh well, I loved Izzie. I’d die for
her. Life was meaningless without her. As I submerged into the water, I felt
like I was going to die. The word cold doesn’t do justice to the feeling that
rushed through every nerve in my body. I swam through the piercing pain, diving
further and further, even though the water felt like a thousand blades stabbing
me, a thousand bullets ripping me to shreds. I seemed to have super human
strength. I’d heard of women who picked up cars to save their babies. Their
love broke the limits of human strength. I never knew it was true. That love
had no limits.
Every thought was of Izzie. I
blocked out the painful cold as I moved down the icey depths of the lake. It
stung and almost paralyzed me. For the first time in my life, I understood the
anguish and bravery of the Titanic survivors. I put meaning to the phrase “if
you jump, I jump.” Leonardo DiCaprio had nothing but looks on me. I used all of
my strength to move, although it felt as if the lake would swallow us both.
Suddenly, I felt her body bump into
mine and I grabbed her. I wrapped my nearly numb arms around her and pushed
like hell to get to the surface of the lake before we turned into human
popsickles. We wouldn’t die in this lake. Not if it was up to me. Finally,
against all odds, we emerged. I pushed Izzie up first out of the water onto the
wooden dock. Then I pulled myself up. My goosebumps, goosebumps, goosebumps,
had goosebumps.
I fell over next to her seemingly
lifeless body, breathing harder or hardly breathing. Moving was painful. I’d
never felt so weak. I had to save her. I sat up and knelt by her. I rushed to
administer CPR to Izzie. Her lips were like ice against mine. I never in my
wildest dreams, or nightmares, pictured our lips meeting for the first time
like this. I breathed the bitter frigid air for both of us. Then I pressed my
hands to her chest and pushed, frantically pumping to get her heart beating. I
was fearful my lips would get stuck to hers like the kid on that movie “A
Christmas Story” who got his tongue stuck to a pole.
I lay my head on her chest listening
for a heartbeat that wasn’t there. NO! I worked faster, harder, breathing and
pushing.
“No! No! No! You can’t do this!” my
voice shook. “I need you. I love you Iz.” It came out a whisper.
What happened next can only be
described as a miracle.
Izzie started coughing up water. She
was alive! I collapsed beside her. Each breath felt like I was swallowing
icicles. I shook violently as did Izzie. I felt frozen to the deck and too
tired to move, but we had to get inside. In one swift motion, I scooped her in
my arms and stood up. She wrapped her arms around my neck, and I hurried to my
house. I got inside the door and closed it with my foot. I was still in shock
and dismay trying to process everything. I couldn’t tell how cold I was. All I
cared about was that Izzie was alive.
Where was her brain? Why did she do
this? She was so intelligent. She had a wonderful life. She was beautiful
beyond description. She had everything going for her. Jellyfish don’t have
brains, but boy or girl do they sting. Izzie sure stung me. She stunned me. How
did I not see this coming? Weren’t there warning signs of suicide? Maybe I was
overreacting and Izzie hadn’t just been trying to take her life. There had to
be some logical explanation to this illogical situation.
Izzie trembled in my arms as I
carried her up the stairs to my room. She was conscious. That was a good sign.
Still she probably had a mild to moderate case of hypothermia. That was
dangerous if left untreated. We both needed to get warm.
“Atticus! I’m… s-so… c-c-cold.”
Izzie stuttered and coughed.
I didn’t say a word. I couldn’t. It
was as if all words were frozen inside of me. I wondered if people could talk
in Alaska or Greenland, or at least how they managed to get the words out since
it’s generally freezing in those places.
I stumbled into my room, still
holding Izzie. I used my back to close the door. I gently sat Izzie down on my
bed. She continued to shiver forcefully. Our skin was infected with goosebumps.
I noticed I trembled too. I cleared my throat. I went into my closet and
grabbed two pairs of sweats, two T-shirts, and a sweatshirt.
I handed one of each to Izzie. She
took them, hands shaking.
“Izzie.” I finally said, kneeling
down in front of her.
“You are suffering from hypothermia.
You need to get out of that wet dress and put these on. You can go and change
in my bathroom or I can help you if you need it.”
She nodded and stood up like a
zombie.
“I think… I think I can manage.” She
stuttered and went into my bathroom. She shut the door and a few minutes later
reemerged. I took her place in my bathroom. I hung my wet clothes next to hers
on my shower rod. Then I took a deep breath and came back into my room. I felt
much better and warmer. Izzie was sitting in a chair still shivering.
I found two blankets in my closet. I
spread one down on the floor in front of the fireplace. I sat down on it. Izzie
followed suite and sat next to me. I wrapped the other blanket around her
shoulders. We were inches apart but it felt like miles, light years even. “This
Christmas” was still playing. The situation was so dilapidated.
Izzie gazed into the fire while I
gazed at her. I could see the flames reflecting in her eyes. I couldn’t take my
eyes off of her. It was as if I was afraid that if I did, she might try to off
herself again. That she would just disappear. It suddenly felt harder to
breathe than it had in the lake. The silence was tearing me apart it was so
loud.
“Rose! You’re so stupid. Why did you
do that, huh? You’re so stupid, Rose. Why did you do that? Why?” I broke the
barrier, cracked the ice.
It was like the fire in Izzie had
burned out.
“I want you to know Izzie that I’m
not going to interrogate you… and I don’t think any differently of you, but if
you need someone to talk to, I’m here for you. I always have been and always
will be.”
Her eyes remained glued to the fire
like a magnet.
“By the time we see stars, they are
dead.” Izzie said in a monotone voice.
Death…where was she going with this?
“That’s impressive Izzie. Did you
know that children grow fastest in the springtime?” I replied, desperately
trying to lighten things up.
Izzie laughed and with that laugh
came a smile I had never been more thrilled to see.
“Atticus.”
I loved it when she said my name.
The way the words formed on those lips I ached to kiss.
“That’s what I like about you. Life
comes easy for you, it’s so natural. I wonder what it would be like to be a
star. They don’t have feelings. Their life is mapped out for them. They help guide
us and are beautiful. Everyone loves them…” Izzie explained and then began to
sob. She buried her head in her knees. I ran my fingers up and down her back
trying to relieve her of the sadness.
What did she mean by that? I was
lost and upset, but I had to stay strong for her, for the both of us.
“Izzie. Life isn’t about perfection.
It’s about making every moment of each day count… not wasting it wishing you
were someone else or dwelling on what you lack. What you aren’t makes you what
you are… who you are supposed to be. It’s about being the best you can, doing
the best you can, making a few mistakes inevitably here and there, but
learning, growing, loving, and moving forward.” I responded gently.
Izzie didn’t say anything. She just
kept crying. I hated seeing her like this. It burned my eyes watching her
suffer, worse than hers probably felt gazing into the fire.
“I spent all day long trying to look
great for Anton and the party! I wasn’t near good enough! We were dancing. I
was on top of the world and all he wanted to do was use me. It all fell down.
He took my hand in his and led me to a vacant room in Summer’s house and
started to kiss me. It was great. Then he pushed me onto a bed and… tried to
undo my dress. I shoved him away and refused. I yelled stop and no! He grabbed
me and tried again, but I hit him. So then he stood up and said fine, he’d find
Claire or Summer, and as he was leaving the room, he turned, glared at me, and
smirked, “Fine Izzelle, you’re not worth it anyways!’ I’ll never be what
everyone wants me to be, never be good enough. Just being me makes no one
happy.” Izzie cried, tears coming down like rain.
I was unbelievably proud of her for
standing up to Anton, staying strong to her ideals and values, and not giving
in, not giving herself to him. I also wanted to kill him. However, I couldn’t believe
the words coming out of her mouth. Was she crazy? How could she say that she’d
never be good enough when she was everything to me?
“If it helps, you’re number one in
my book.” I admitted.
For the first time that night, she
met my eyes.
“Yeah right! You have to say that
because we’re best friends. It’s in the job description. You’re just trying to
make me feel better by lying and, might I add, you’re failing miserably.” She
replied and turned away.
“Izzie.” I gently pulled on her
shoulder. She faced me, still silently crying.
An overwhelming feeling shot through
every part of my body, racing like a comet in the sky, spreading warmth and
light and electricity through my blood, my bones, my skin. I had stared into
the eyes of this girl for years, for my entire life, and it surprised me how
suddenly this was a new experience now. It was like seeing her for the first
time, yet knowing her forever.
“Yeah?” She asked.
And then the truth came pouring out
of me like her tears.
“I… I-I’m not saying that because I
am your best friend. I am saying it because I mean it, because I can’t hold it
inside any longer. You’re the most amazing, beautiful girl in existence. Anton
has no idea what he’s missing right now.” I whispered, reached for her hand,
and laced my fingers through hers. She squeezed my hand. I ran my thumb around
her soft skin in the shape of a heart.
“Atticus, I feel like a hamster on
one of those stupid wheels they run on! They race for hours every single day
going absolutely nowhere only stopping to eat and sleep. That’s the sum of
their existence and mine. They don’t have another option really, no control.
That’s my fate. I’m alive, existing, but not going anywhere, not truly living.” She confided in me, and I knew I was the only
one she’d ever admitted this to.
Now it all made sense… at least as
much as it could.
“Izzelle Finch you are going so many
places and just because you can’t see them doesn’t mean they aren’t there. You can
do anything! I know it. You could be the first female president or a teacher or
a doctor or a model or just you. The sky is not the limit. You will go farther
than the stars. Fate will lead you where you’re meant to go. You just have to
trust it Izzie. You have to have faith. And promise me, promise me, that you’ll
never ever even think about givingup again.” I meant it all.
“I promise. Thank you for saving me…
but do you really think so?” She finally asked.
“I know it.” I stated firmly, not
missing a beat.
“You mean it?”
“All of it.” I whispered and
tightened my hold on her fingers.
“That’s insane.”
“Why?” I didn’t expect that.
“Because… you’re the most incredible
boy I’ve ever known.” She whispered and leaned her body in closer to mine. My
heart lit up like the stars she always went on about.
She smiled at me for the first time
that night and then got her cute, confused look and frowned.
“Does this mean what I think it
does?” She asked, searching my eyes.
“Mean what?”
“That all along… I’ve had everything
I’ve ever wanted living next door this whole time and never noticed. That I was
searching for all the wrong guys in all the wrong places and it’s you, it’s
always been you, where my heart belongs. The boy who completes me, you’ve been
here the entire time.” She looked wonderstruck. Her eyes lit up as the truth
coursed through her.
Then she smiled, blushing.
I grinned as I head the words I’d
been waiting to hear my whole life.
“Indeed it does. I’ve been waiting
for you to recognize this painfully obvious fact.”
“But wait! What happens if things
don’t work out? What if I lose you, my love, and my best friend at the same
time?” Izzie asked sincerely.
“You won’t. I love you Iz. I will
always be your best friend.”
We locked eyes and it took my breath
away.
Then I glanced up over the
fireplace.
“Is that what I think it is?” I
asked mischieviously.
“What?” Izzie followed my gaze as I
pointed at the mistletoe my mom put above my fireplace.
“Mistletoe.” We both said in unison.
“You know what that means…” I
laughed.
She got a total serious look on her
face and let go of my hand.
I was worried.
Then she gave me that smile that
vanished all of my fears.
“Yes. But I don’t need a plant to
tell me to kiss you.”
Then she put her hands on either
side of my face, leaned in, and kissed me.
And at that precise moment, that
wish I’d been making at 11:11, the wish I’d probably made 11,111,111 times,
finally came true.