Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
And The Rain Falls - 1. Chapter 1
How I came to be sitting on this bench, I don't know. The last thing I remember was the feeling of having to get out; having to get away as fast as I could so that the gravity of the news I had just received didn't tear me to pieces. It was one of the few times in my life where I had trouble comprehending what I was hearing. It wasn't that I didn't hear it right but that I didn't want to accept it. I didn't want it to be true. It just simply couldn't be.
Sitting here on this bench, listening to the waves crash against the rocks below me as a thunderstorm unfolded around me, had a calming feeling. It gave me the mental clarity to be able to think. When I awoke this morning things were the same as they always were. My life wasn't perfect but I felt in control, something I definitely did not feel at the moment.
Without warning the storm suddenly let loose and the rain started falling in giant driving waves. I was soaked within seconds, and the rain brought me back to this bench and just why I was sitting here. I was sitting in my office finishing some paperwork and looking forward to a long relaxing weekend when my cell phone rang.
"Hey Celia, what's up?" I said, recognizing the number as that of the sister of my closest friend and confidant Ben Holt.
"Lucas, I really hope that you are sitting down."
I immediately picked up on the distress in her voice and stopped what I was doing to devote my full attention to her.
"What's wrong Celia?"
"Lucas, I... I don't know how to tell you this so I'll just say it. Ben was in a car accident. He's in surgery and they don't expect him to make it."
I was shocked. My phone fell from my hand, landing on the floor somewhere under my desk. The next thought to run through my head was that it wasn't true and that I had to get out of here. If I went somewhere else maybe it wouldn't be true. The next thing that I knew I was sitting here on this bench.
This bench. The exact spot where I first met Ben. My parents had died in a plane crash the month before and it was on this bench where I spent many hours coming to terms that I was now all alone in this world. It was that fateful sunny day when Ben happened to be walking along the trail that runs past this bench and decided that I needed company.
"You know, it's illegal to look that down on a day this beautiful."
Those were his very first words to me. I was too lost in my own head to find them funny or cheerful and just sat there staring out to sea.
"I'm Ben" he said, offering his hand.
I loosely took it, mumbled "Lucas" and went back into my head.
"Well it's nice to meet you Lucas. Now, would you care to tell me why the cutest guy in the area looks like his dog just got run over by a truck or am I going to have to just sit here quietly and enjoy my view of you?"
Knowing that there was probably very little I could do that would get him to go away part of myself warmed up slightly inside. Even his few brief, slightly cheesy words were enough for me to register that even his presence alone was enough to signify that I would not, in fact, spend my 22nd birthday alone. I also decided that I should tell someone what I was going through, what I was feeling. Given that this perfect stranger was here, I might as well tell him.
"Until you came along I had resigned myself to spend today, my birthday, alone."
"Well then, happy birthday to you but why are you spending it alone? Surely there must be someone in your life to spend the day with."
I glanced over at him, this mysterious stranger named Ben to whom I was about to reveal the source of my recent anguish upon. He was smiling what had to have been the most perfect smile I had ever seen. That, paired with his hazel eyes, lightly tanned skin, and dirty blond hair made me decide to share my pain with him. I rationalized it by asking myself what the worst thing that could happen would be. I could tell him and in the end he could get up and walk away and I could move on down the path of healing.
"No, there's no one. Not since my parent's died in a plane crash last month."
The smile faded from his face and he offered his condolences.
"I'm so sorry. Do you want to talk about it?" He flashed that winning smile at me, getting me to share more.
"They died and I've spent the last four years buried in my studies. Until you sat down there was no one outside of classmates and professors in my life. That's basically all of it."
"Again, I'm so sorry. How about I try to cheer you up? Come with me, and let's celebrate your birthday like it should be celebrated."
What did I have to lose? The company was a welcomed change and I was to the point that I'd do just about anything to take my mind off of my parents. "Okay."
With that we went off and spent the rest of the day together. I had gained an instant friend and was able to move past the loss of my parents. And it was the memory of that day that I now found myself visiting while sitting on this bench, soaked to the bone and staring down at the waves as their mist topped peaks crashed against the rocks.
It rained for three days. Three long days of water streaming downward from the heavens, soaking the earth. The leaves stayed green, the flowers stayed hidden, and Ben stayed silent and motionless -- lost in the embrace of his coma.
When Celia found me sitting on the bench soaked to the bone, she tried to take me home. She tried to get me to dry off, to stop shivering. She took me home and made me change out of those wet clothes. Then she took me to him. Right to his side.
I was quiet the whole way, lost inside my own head. All I could think about was how everyone who mattered to me always left this plane of existence for another and that he would surely do the same. Seeing him lying there in that hospital bed made me wish for him to leave, if just to end the suffering that he would surely go through.
Those three days passed like water slowly dripping from a faucet. Seconds felt like hours, passing slowly, one after the next, every ‘Tick’ of the clock reverberating loudly inside my head.
Ben spent them in a coma, his leg in traction, his arm in a splint. He had a black eye, two broken fingers, three broken ribs, a fractured arm, and a badly broken leg. He was also covered in various cuts and bruises from where his windshield had imploded and his seat belt had held him firm.
“Celia, it’s so hard to see him like that, to see him injured. You guys are the closest thing to family that I have left and just to think of one of you like that tears me apart.” The thoughts running through his head were hurting him.
“I know Lucas, I know.” Was her reply, her hand resting on Lucas’ shoulder offering him some small form of comfort.
They were standing in the hallway outside of Ben’s room on the third floor of Harbor Memorial Hospital. The walls were a soft blue up here, the floors bright white, the lighting fluorescent. Everything here seemed exaggerated, from the soft patter of feet as the nurses shuffled around to the steady ‘tick’ the clock made as the second hand moved from one mark to the next.
It all served to remind Lucas that his best friend - his savior once upon a time - now needed saving and he was powerless to help. That and he couldn’t get past the notion that there was something gnawing at the furthest reaches of his mind, some thought that wanted to make itself known. Lucas didn’t know it yet but that thought would change the path of his future.
“Lucas, why don’t you go get some coffee” Celia suggested. “Or better yet, go home and get some sleep. You can’t spend all of your time here.”
She had a point. He was tired of sneaking an hour here or there in those uncomfortable hospital chairs. “Maybe you’re right. I just want to be here should anything change.”
“I promise I’ll call you first thing if it does. Do yourself this one favor and get some sleep. Ben would want that from you. And besides,” she injected as nicely as possible, “you’re kind starting to smell, so why don’t you grab a hot shower and clean clothes while you’re there?”
The look that Lucas cast her was pure steel. Under other circumstances he would have laughed at it, would have cast her one of his famous smiles and made her laugh as well. He pulled the collar of his t-shirt out and tilted his head down so that his nose was underneath the fabric and sniffed. Again, she had a point. She always had a point. And she had promised to let him know if anything changed...
“If you say so, but only if you promise to call me first.”
“I promise.” With that she hugged him and he slowly shuffled toward the lounge to grab his coat and from there on toward the elevators.
His SUV sat in the lot forty paces from the main entrance. He’d grabbed the first vacant spot when he’d followed Celia here from the cliffs. He dashed toward it, leaving the relative safety of the hospital overhang, trying not to get soaked again from this never ending downpour.
As he opened the door and slid into the embrace of the driver’s seat he couldn’t help but think about this picturesque seaside town and how even in the rain it managed to sparkle. He put the key in the ignition and turned it, the engine roaring to life.
He backed out of the space, shifted into drive, and headed left out of the parking lot. His house, a perfect 1950’s style craftsman, sat three streets up the hill from the hospital and four blocks over. Nothing in this town was far and his house was right in the middle. He’d bought it out of foreclosure for a steal and lovingly restored it. It was his main passion in life. Seeing it never failed to bring a smile to his face.
It sat there, back from the sidewalk, a giant elm shading the front yard. It wasn’t overly large or grand but it fit him. As he pulled into the driveway he couldn’t help but smile for the first time since he found out about Ben. As he quickly hurried through the rain and up onto the porch his smile faded.
** End Chapter One**
More to come. If you like it, please let me know. That is the best motivation to keep writing.
- 14
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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