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Published: 2010-11-01 10:48:13 +0000 UTC; Views: 7729; Favourites: 217; Downloads: 13
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Description
Cole is eleven. Age matters in October, when twelve is the only difference between the haunted hayride and the shelled corn sandbox. Age matters when a boy says the word "shit" in school (and Cole does). But age doesn't matter when the same boy has both sneakers dangling over the edge of a 250-foot grain silo, his hands sweaty on the rungs, the state of Nebraska breathing vacant and honeyed and infinite below him. For the first time in his life, Cole can't be quantified by the candles on his last birthday cake. Cole is young, but today, he is worth saving. Three facts about Cole:1. His eyebrows are the most expressive arches his body has to offer.
2. He's so terrified that his very expressive eyebrows are threatening to take up permanent residence in his hairline.
3. He does not have suicidal tendencies, and later understands--for the sake of his mother's heart and Officer Roy's bladder control--that his strategies for ascension should never involve the climbing of large, dangerous buildings.
On the ground between their parents, Peter is starving for his brother's vertigo. Pete is seventeen and his feet no longer itch for balance. He has come to terms with instability, thinks it much more honest than standing still. Honesty is important to Pete. Three truths by Peter Spellis:
1. His good friend Geo committed suicide last April by jumping off a balcony in the city where they used to live. (1a. Nothing of Cole's current situation recalls that tragedy. Pete is traumatized only by soft faces in car windows, the sound of rain clicking on yellow police tape.)
2. He feels his loss dimly and without drama, as if through someone else's body. (2a. A poet could find words to make it solid, functional, something strong enough to write on.)
3. Pete is not a poet.
The world is smaller in the countryside. Its geography is not hyperbolized. Unlike the city, it shines in crises: Cole is netted with psychiatric platitudes from four separate megaphones, and the town police force is here in its entirety (both officers). Cole repeats, "Oh, shit, what the hell, what the hell" as he inches down the side of the silo. Cole is not a performer. The attention has him half-dead with stage fright. He went to the circus with Pete last year, and he held his breath while the acrobats swam on their aerial silks, afraid to disturb their air. If Cole is guilty of anything, it is having too much belief that he can move the world.
Someone passes Pete a megaphone. "Hi, Cole!" he says.
Cole still has a hundred feet to go. He manages to nod.
"See anything interesting from up there?"
"Nothing I haven't seen before," Cole calls down. "Maybe our house? The roof is green? The front door is open."
The front door is open because Lindy Spellis kicked it open as she ran screaming to the grain silo. Pete almost asks Cole if he can read the lines in their mother's forehead from his distance, the verses she has worried into her shirt with fretful hands. Lindy Spellis is not a poet, either. The wrinkles speak clumsily: My dumb, daring youngest! / Who told you flight was worth falling? / I instilled in you self-preservation: / the rest is up to you. She no longer presumes to have any behavioral control over them. It's why they love her.
Cole has fifty feet to go and his foot misses a step. He slips an inch and the crowd wails. Cole flushes with terror and importance.
"Great job, Grace," Pete says. "Did your life flash before your eyes?"
Officer Roy snatches the megaphone out of his hands.
"If it did, it was so short that I missed it," Cole says, not without a measure of sadness.
Pete understands that. Rural suicide is slower, and it sounds like Plath reading poetry. Cole is also not a poet, let alone a self-murdering one, but he is Dickinsonian in his punctuation, with slap-in-the-face dashes like border disputes, or shotgun blasts. An angry note in the steam in the bathroom mirror might read: peter. dammit!! - learn your colors / because MY bathtowel - is the blue-one.
(For the record:
1. Pete would never use his mirror again if his brother slipped from the silo.
2. Pete sees Cole as something eternal and revolutionary, the only moving hero of a still world. As an only child, Pete was an underachiever. Cole was conceived with progress in mind.)
Cole is so miraculous that he bridges the gap between death and life by shuffling down a ladder. This is the right way to live; with relieved crowds, people who applaud when a boy dares to move his feet. Here's the punch line: as soon as Cole is safe on the grass, Lindy Spellis tells him he's grounded. "I am," says Cole humbly. "I so am."
That evening, after night has swallowed the grain silo and all of its neighboring propaganda, Pete brings Cole a glass of water and asks him why he did it. If he were more poetic, he'd try with, "Prospective fatality is closer to living than living, isn't it?" But Pete hates poets. Poets are liars in stanzas. Pete accompanies the question with no gilding: he strokes Cole's sheets smooth and says, "Why?"
"I was just tired of feeling small," Cole says.
Pete holds one of Cole's hands and examines it against his own, soft and lineless, his fingers still half-curled from the strain of clinging to existence. Sometimes Pete wants to tell him that small is an illusion that he will outgrow. But Pete understands:
1. Why tiny bodies want to test themselves against their boundaries.
2. Why structures scramble into the skies to save space.
3. What, on slow days in Nebraska, makes eleven feel a year and a universe away from alive.
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Comments: 74
VFireFalcon [2010-12-02 04:55:29 +0000 UTC]
This is so beautiful... and I think by writing this, you are a poet. A prose poet, yes, but the way your phrases flow is certainly poetic. It also reminds me strongly of my own childhood.
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paralost [2010-11-07 16:28:46 +0000 UTC]
Oh you... Why are you so goddamn talented. <3
By the way, I was musing on how you were doing before I saw you had this piece up. I miss you and art class. Mostly just you.
I hope you are well.
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FakeKraid [2010-11-02 03:31:22 +0000 UTC]
...you know, I think you really might be a genius. Have I said that before? I grant that it's not hard to write something clearly enough for me to understand. I am pretty smart, after all. But you cement such complex ideas in such an elemental fashion, that even a little mind would read and understand, not through intellect, but sympathy. To turn the intellect into a feeling, so that the heart takes the place of the brain, or maybe vice-versa - that is a real accomplishment. I bow to your skill, even if you're not old or experienced enough yet to know how great it is, or what quite to do with it. When once you've grown into it, you'll really be something. Please, please keep writing. Don't stop.
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FUMOUFFU-FUMO In reply to FakeKraid [2011-02-10 13:36:29 +0000 UTC]
She is a genius, i basically stand next to her for comical value!!!
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MelZayas [2010-11-02 03:26:49 +0000 UTC]
At first I wasn't sure what to make of this odd format, with the numbered lists and all, but I think it works really well. I like the story and the characters and the background you've given them.
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Tisala [2010-11-02 00:25:47 +0000 UTC]
And you say you aren't a poet. That's poetic prose if I ever read it. Beautifully done.
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Cinvxten [2010-11-01 21:56:35 +0000 UTC]
You always make me so jealous, no matter what you do, haha. It's times like these when I realize I still have a long way to go, and you motivate me to reach those heights once so daunting. I'm really glad to hear that this is part of a larger project, because I'm super excited to learn more about these characters.
Also, the "grounded" pun was my favorite. If only there were more people with your kind of wit!
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Aeyun [2010-11-01 19:25:00 +0000 UTC]
Wow You really know how to ... play with words. It is my dream to achieve that.
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freudenschade In reply to Aeyun [2010-11-11 00:48:05 +0000 UTC]
Thank you so much! Words are tricky. Let's keep learning together. ♥
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flowerpower09 [2010-11-01 19:22:09 +0000 UTC]
I think I'm absolutely in love with this. Everything flows so well and I can imagine everything happening so clearly in my mind!
I think Cole's line at the end sums this up. At some point in our lives, we've all been tired of feeling small when everything in the world is just so big. Cole and Pete are just the characters to remind us that.
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freudenschade In reply to flowerpower09 [2010-11-11 00:47:06 +0000 UTC]
Sorry for the late response, and thank you very much! I'm so glad that you relate to that feeling of smallness. I know I wrote about the opposite view here, but I like to think we are all much bigger than we realize. ♥
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hedgehogfairy In reply to ??? [2010-11-01 19:09:07 +0000 UTC]
this is really outstanding, it touched me
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freudenschade In reply to hedgehogfairy [2010-11-11 00:44:41 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! I am flattered to hear that! ♥
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Poison-Stripes In reply to freudenschade [2010-11-20 01:19:23 +0000 UTC]
You're very welcome.
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Autio-Ainoa [2010-11-01 15:17:01 +0000 UTC]
Something about this I love more than I can find words to say.
c:
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freudenschade In reply to Autio-Ainoa [2010-11-11 00:44:10 +0000 UTC]
I am thrilled to hear that! Thank you very, very much! ♥
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TheAtariSafari [2010-11-01 11:04:29 +0000 UTC]
It was very enjoyable I love the way it flowed. I'm also going to agree with the last comment this is quite nice to see apart from artists trying to do anime.
I really enjoyed the theme, the small town big adventure attitude was also refreshing.
It also really highlights what growing up is really like,and I only have 1 more point to add to this comment.
Its negative and I apologise for being ungrateful but, It needed more so the beauty never ended.
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freudenschade In reply to TheAtariSafari [2010-11-11 00:43:46 +0000 UTC]
Thanks so much for the kind words! Sorry it took me a long time to reply. I'm so happy with your "small town big adventure" comment. I've never written adventure well! That someone derived adventurous themes from my writing is a huge compliment, and I can't tell you how much I appreciate it.
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LintCleastwood [2010-11-01 10:57:45 +0000 UTC]
Wow.
I think I found a gem in the pile of shit that is the most recent deviations.
I really enjoyed this. Really enjoyed it.
It's nice to see something like this instead of all the anime crap on this site, especially something as good as this.
Maybe I'm just saying all of this because I'm excited to see something like this, but I really did enjoy it.
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freudenschade In reply to LintCleastwood [2010-11-11 00:40:05 +0000 UTC]
Sorry for the late reply, and thank you so much for the kind words! I'm moved that you got something out of this. I appreciate the anime on dA, but I'm of the opinion that the world could always, always use more writing. ♥
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