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    skinnydragon
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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. 

18 Weeks of Twoey - 28. Week Four Sunday September 28, 2014 Unfulfilled Dreams

At death, your unfulfilled dreams fade away.

The alarm buzzed at 6:30 for my run. I smashed it off. There would be no run today. In fact, I probably only fell asleep an hour ago. I had cried all night. Cried until I couldn't understand how my body could still produce tears.

At fifteen years old, your life is said to sprawl out before you. Many paths diverge from where you now stand. Each entices you with its own possibilities. Each frightens you with unknown dangers. Each confronts you with unique challenges. A myriad of paths, endless possibilities and countless universes await us. It is our future.

At fifteen years of age you are supposed to have a future. Now, sadly, I’m beginning to understand something only too well. Life is a crapshoot. Nothing is supposed to happen. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it ends. I can't get my head around such a brutally harsh truth. Not even close. My friend is dead. He has no future paths to walk.

I think a large part of my world is now forever dead. This new hollow feeling has attacked me, injured me and won the battle. I’ll never be the same again. It hurts too much.

No one knows what happened yet. Well, I'm sure someone knows, but nobody’s telling us. All we know is the horrifying results. It hurts so much.

We warned Twoey not to go there. My warning wasn’t good enough. I wasn’t forceful enough. In the end, I guess, it simply didn’t count for much.

I’m hollow inside. I’ve heard that phrase before. I knew what it meant, but never truly understood the feeling it tried to convey. I wish I still didn’t understand. I’d give anything to not understand it’s meaning again. But I can’t go back. Nobody can go back. If I could have gone back, for even a few minutes, I would have slapped Twoey so hard he’d finally have understood our warning.

There is a list of things I’d do over. There is a list of actions I should have taken. There is a list of things I’ve done wrong. There are so fucking many lists in my mind right now. But there is only one list which actually means anything at all. Only one list left to ponder. Only one list that matters. Only one list that is stamped on my brain forever: the casualty list.

Danny is dead.

Danny's father is dead.

Twoey is in intensive care. He’s gonna die too.

I rolled over and cried yet again into my pillow. I never went back to sleep. I guess I’ll have to operate on one hour today. Maybe I’ll nap later. When I heard my family stirring, I made my way to the bathroom, got in the shower and stood there, under the hottest water I could bear, and cried more. After drying, I threw on some sweats and left my room bumping into Tommy in the hallway. We hugged tightly and both cried into each other. Everybody loved Danny and his freckles. Our bubbly little redhead. How could someone with endless quantities of life, suddenly have no life at all? How does that even work?

I picked at some fruit but couldn't really eat. I even drank coffee for the first time. I hate the taste of coffee. I think I’ll drink coffee from now on. I need to do things I hate. I need it for my sanity, to feel anything again. At least I can feel the coffee.

Tommy's mother and my father got ready to go to church but even they knew not to ask us kids. We stayed home. I got a call from Kathy wanting to know if it was true. I got a call from Gary saying the gang (only four of us now) was going to meet at Sam's house. Well, why not? Maybe Sam knows something. Although somehow I don’t think this is something even Sam would know about.

After dressing, I went over to pick up Gary and we walked to Sam’s. It was eerie. We could see Danny's big house a few doors down from Sam’s. There it stood, everything well painted and trim. The hedges and lawn looked perfect. The only thing that didn’t fit the spit and polish image was the yellow tape all around the porch, as though it were a crime scene. Well, I guess it was a crime scene.

We gathered in Sam's room and tried to make sense of what had happened. No way could we understand it, not even Sam. He told us his neighbor said she heard a shot. Shortly, she heard another shot. It's when she called the police. Now we were trying to figure it all out. I mean, if somebody shot a gun, it was probably Danny’s father ...right? But if Danny's father was dead, somebody shot him. And how did Twoey fit into it? And why would Danny's father shoot his own son? Nothing was adding up. And where was Danny's mother in all of this? And where was she now? Was she in jail? Did she shoot Danny’s father?

We were throwing all this wild stuff around. In the end, we weren't any better off than when we were each trying to figure it out on our own. But at least I wasn't crying anymore. There were no tears left in me anyway. From seeing all the red eyes, I hadn't been the only one crying all night. We sat and talked all day. Sam's mother brought us sandwiches and other food but I hardly ate. I may never eat again. One thing we decided was no way were we going to school tomorrow. We'd meet at Nels's house tomorrow at 10 am. Maybe someone would know something by then.

I walked home with Gary but we hardly spoke. I entered my house, which suddenly transformed into out-of-focus tunnel walls, leading me straight to my room. I stripped, took another long hot shower, dried off and sat naked on my bed. I sat there, alone in my room, and became lost in thought. At least I wasn’t numb anymore.

I thought of Twoey. I’d only known Twoey for a few weeks, less than a month. I recalled the first and most unforgettable day. I remembered how his green eyes captured me; how I ran home in panic. Those four intervening weeks were chuck full of emotional highs and lows for me. I realized, finally, I was beginning to connect with him. It was getting to be like we had known each other for years. Our friendship was on the cusp of blossoming. I was starting to have warm feelings when we spoke. We were becoming comfortable with each other ...good friends. The stunning green-eyed boy from Syracuse who dropped into our lives as his closest friend dropped out of his. Twoey.

I thought of Danny. Of course I had known Danny for almost my entire life. When you grow up close to someone, there is a familiarity which doesn’t have a name or a definition. You learn their character, their moods, their spirit. Animata, I once read somewhere. You can sense things about them, things others cannot feel. You can sense they’re lonely. You can sense they suffer. You can sense they are depressed. You can sense they only smile on the outside. You can sense their longing. You know they are forever sad ...our Danny.

When you’re 15 years old, you have a lot of dreams.

Some are very specific. Places you want to see, things you want to do, experiences you want to ...experience.

Others are not quite clear or defined. Maybe marriage, maybe kids, maybe grandkids!

You want to go to college, but it’s too early to even think precisely where.

You want an amazing job, but it’s too far off to know exactly what it will be.

You dream of silly stuff, unattainable stuff: a huge mansion, a Lamborghini, Olympic gold in ...surfing or something.

 

These are your dreams.

No one else shares this exact same group of dreams.

Twoey had his set of dreams.

Danny had his dreams too.

And today there’s a huge mountain somewhere.

 

I don’t know exactly where it is, but I know it does exist. I know it exists like I know I exist.

It’s the mountain of their unfulfilled dreams.

My Gallery has images for some of the chapters of 18 Weeks!
Copyright © 2016 skinnydragon; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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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Chapter Comments

Ah, SD, you made me cry with this one. I hope Twoey pulls through, but he's not going to be the same person even if his physical wounds all heal. September 27th will be a day he'll never forget, but for all the wrong reasons...a day of joy turned into such desperate tragedy.
We'll never know what depths Danny had endured unless it comes out in the police investigation, but I hope he can find peace now when it was denied him in life...if there is any justice, what he endured will remain private and not made into a media frenzy.
I can hazard a guess as to the events which occurred at Danny's house, but I'll hold off until you give us more information...
The school will offer counselling to the students, but I don't see it doing any good for David's real issues--he's very good at hiding them, and hiding from them. I'm sure Tommy's mom wouldn't allow it anyway, she'd rather have him see her wacko cultist than someone with real credentials. I'd love to see this incident give David's father the courage to stand up for himself and his children, but that probably won't happen either.
Tick...tick...tick...the explosion is coming closer.

  • Like 1

1. I weep for Danny. As David reflects, he left so much behind, so much undone.
2. I weep for David, who lost someone he deeply cared about - and still cares, too. Who will help him with that loss? His friends? Tommy? Maybe even his parents? Pray the parents can be humane enough not to sit in judgment.
3. I weep for Twoey - not only for his physical pain, but for the horrible pain he will endure as he comes to terms with Danny's death and his part in that event. Who will help him to feel something other that guilt and responsibility?
And for all the families and friends touched by tragedies like these - and there are too many - I weep.
A monumentally well written chapter.

  • Like 1
On 10/27/2015 10:49 PM, ColumbusGuy said:

Ah, SD, you made me cry with this one. I hope Twoey pulls through, but he's not going to be the same person even if his physical wounds all heal. September 27th will be a day he'll never forget, but for all the wrong reasons...a day of joy turned into such desperate tragedy.

We'll never know what depths Danny had endured unless it comes out in the police investigation, but I hope he can find peace now when it was denied him in life...if there is any justice, what he endured will remain private and not made into a media frenzy.

I can hazard a guess as to the events which occurred at Danny's house, but I'll hold off until you give us more information...

The school will offer counselling to the students, but I don't see it doing any good for David's real issues--he's very good at hiding them, and hiding from them. I'm sure Tommy's mom wouldn't allow it anyway, she'd rather have him see her wacko cultist than someone with real credentials. I'd love to see this incident give David's father the courage to stand up for himself and his children, but that probably won't happen either.

Tick...tick...tick...the explosion is coming closer.

Thanks for the review CG!

Yeah I cried a little too as I wrote this. Unfortunately I edited and rewrote it a thousand times, and each time brought a tear. I loved Danny and hated that he died.

David's in a tough but necessary place right now. Maybe Dad will begin to see the light, we can only hope.

  • Like 2
On 10/28/2015 12:20 AM, Parker Owens said:

1. I weep for Danny. As David reflects, he left so much behind, so much undone.

2. I weep for David, who lost someone he deeply cared about - and still cares, too. Who will help him with that loss? His friends? Tommy? Maybe even his parents? Pray the parents can be humane enough not to sit in judgment.

3. I weep for Twoey - not only for his physical pain, but for the horrible pain he will endure as he comes to terms with Danny's death and his part in that event. Who will help him to feel something other that guilt and responsibility?

And for all the families and friends touched by tragedies like these - and there are too many - I weep.

A monumentally well written chapter.

Thanks for the thoughts Parker.

Of course you're right. We read of a tragedy in the paper but never think of how it affects so many people, and often so deeply.

If Twoey survives he will have a different outlook I'm sure. Will he be afraid to love again? Hmmm. Maybe it's a good thing he lives with his counselor :)

  • Like 2

David's thoughts are very insightful. He saw Danny's pain and loneliness. He doesn't know yet (he might never know), that Saturday, September 27, was probably the happiest day in Danny's life. And probably the happiest day in Twoey's life also. I'm so glad Danny got to experience love, if at least for a little while. In his very short time on earth, I'm glad Twoey was with him, the person Danny loved and wanted to be with.

 

Goddammit, Skinny, I'm sitting here typing, and I can barely see the friggen' keys because my eyes are so blurry.

 

Along with CG, I could think of one scenario of how things went down in Danny's house, but I'll keep that to myself also.

 

Shit, I think there's only one more chapter to read, and I'll be all caught up. You better write faster, Skinny!!

  • Like 1
On 10/31/2015 03:35 PM, Lisa said:

David's thoughts are very insightful. He saw Danny's pain and loneliness. He doesn't know yet (he might never know), that Saturday, September 27, was probably the happiest day in Danny's life. And probably the happiest day in Twoey's life also. I'm so glad Danny got to experience love, if at least for a little while. In his very short time on earth, I'm glad Twoey was with him, the person Danny loved and wanted to be with.

 

Goddammit, Skinny, I'm sitting here typing, and I can barely see the friggen' keys because my eyes are so blurry.

 

Along with CG, I could think of one scenario of how things went down in Danny's house, but I'll keep that to myself also.

 

Shit, I think there's only one more chapter to read, and I'll be all caught up. You better write faster, Skinny!!

Thanks for the review and tears Lisa!

I have to admit, each time I rewrote the chapter, I got them too. I really fell in love with Danny myself.

Sometimes David understands stuff so well, other times he's really obtuse! Maybe it's a subconscious defense mechanism that won't allow him to see the truth.

  • Like 2

David did always say that his friendship with Danny was special we see more of what Danny meant to him here. I wish they were able to share what Danny had to keep hidden, but in the end I'm grateful that Danny had Twoey.
These boys David, but especially Twoey will not be the same. Sudden violent deaths like this changes an adult much less teens. I wonder how those changes will show up.
My heart is breaking...for Twoey's mom also.

  • Like 1
On 11/06/2015 05:04 AM, Defiance19 said:

David did always say that his friendship with Danny was special we see more of what Danny meant to him here. I wish they were able to share what Danny had to keep hidden, but in the end I'm grateful that Danny had Twoey.

These boys David, but especially Twoey will not be the same. Sudden violent deaths like this changes an adult much less teens. I wonder how those changes will show up.

My heart is breaking...for Twoey's mom also.

Thanks Defiance!

 

You're correct about the David/Danny bond, of which we'll discover more ahead.

 

The trauma of this will seep into future events, for sure.

  • Like 2

Wow skinny ...

 

This is the first chapter of 'twoey' I read without laughing. I actually cried a little.

 

While speaking of dreams, the dreams of boys, David says:

 


You dream of silly stuff, unattainable stuff: a huge mansion, a Lamborghini, Olympic gold in ...surfing or something.

And I smiled.

 


It’s the mountain of their unfulfilled dreams.

And I cried a little more ...

 


This chapter is sad, mournful, and regretful. It is also powerfully beautiful. Poetic really.

 

Thanks skinny.

  • Like 1
On 02/09/2016 04:43 PM, said:

Wow skinny ...

 

This is the first chapter of 'twoey' I read without laughing. I actually cried a little.

 

While speaking of dreams, the dreams of boys, David says:

 

You dream of silly stuff, unattainable stuff: a huge mansion, a Lamborghini, Olympic gold in ...surfing or something.

And I smiled.

 

It’s the mountain of their unfulfilled dreams.

And I cried a little more ...

 

 

This chapter is sad, mournful, and regretful. It is also powerfully beautiful. Poetic really.

 

Thanks skinny.

Thanks oxala

 

It was a difficult chapter to write, I cried too

  • Like 2

Each of us react to death in different ways. I was kind of put out by the overreaction by David. Sure Danny's future is cut short, but characters die, even if they're semi-biographical. Maybe it's David's emotional state that overreacts to situations that's tearing him apart. He definitely needs psychological help and I hope he can get it.
Danny's father's homophobia is fully apparent and I suspect he selfishly realized his self-image of militaristic glory would be destroyed by his overreaction. Or, maybe, his wife did the dastardly deed?
At least we can hope Twoey will come out of this intact, but is something bad going to come out of this for him, too? Will the new reports say that both boys were naked at the time of the shooting? That would certainly fuel a small town's gossip-mill.
Another great chapter even if it was a bit sappy.

  • Like 1
On 03/07/2016 10:43 AM, CarlHoliday said:

Each of us react to death in different ways. I was kind of put out by the overreaction by David. Sure Danny's future is cut short, but characters die, even if they're semi-biographical. Maybe it's David's emotional state that overreacts to situations that's tearing him apart. He definitely needs psychological help and I hope he can get it.

Danny's father's homophobia is fully apparent and I suspect he selfishly realized his self-image of militaristic glory would be destroyed by his overreaction. Or, maybe, his wife did the dastardly deed?

At least we can hope Twoey will come out of this intact, but is something bad going to come out of this for him, too? Will the new reports say that both boys were naked at the time of the shooting? That would certainly fuel a small town's gossip-mill.

Another great chapter even if it was a bit sappy.

Hey Carl, thanks for the comments!

 

Sorry for the 'sappy' but David is prone to introspection and also, of course, he's resisting his orientation. Don't worry, it only gets worse. ;)

  • Like 2

SkinnyDragon;
You have an amazing ability to make people connect with your characters. The absolute fear I felt at the end of chapter 27 has been replaced by the incalculable sorrow I feel about the death of Danny. Danny was a bright light and clearly loved the people around him. More than he should have, more than was safe for him to do so. There's something especially tragic about someone so innocent and full of life being killed, and the specific circumstances of his death and Twoey's critical injuries only serves to highlight how sad the deaths are.
David's thoughts are reflective and introspective, but they're also very insightful and a moving tribute to his fallen friend. For those who are not strangers to death, this chapter is poignant and heartbreaking, but also very well-written. I can't imagine the catharsis you felt in writing this.

  • Like 1
On 05/11/2016 05:43 PM, Hunter Thomson said:

SkinnyDragon;

You have an amazing ability to make people connect with your characters. The absolute fear I felt at the end of chapter 27 has been replaced by the incalculable sorrow I feel about the death of Danny. Danny was a bright light and clearly loved the people around him. More than he should have, more than was safe for him to do so. There's something especially tragic about someone so innocent and full of life being killed, and the specific circumstances of his death and Twoey's critical injuries only serves to highlight how sad the deaths are.

David's thoughts are reflective and introspective, but they're also very insightful and a moving tribute to his fallen friend. For those who are not strangers to death, this chapter is poignant and heartbreaking, but also very well-written. I can't imagine the catharsis you felt in writing this.

Thank you for those beautiful comments Hunter!

 

It was a tough one to write. "Catharsis" is a good word.

 

Sometimes the connection with my characters (especially David) causes many reviewers to get angry with him or me. :)

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