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    Thorn Wilde
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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. 

Storms - 1. Daniel

I pulled on my jacket. The sleeves were slightly frayed and the lining torn, but it kept me warm enough for this time of year.

‘Mum, I’m off!’ I called. There was no answer. I sighed and walked down the hall towards the kitchen.

My mother was sat at the kitchen table, smoking a cigarette. She looked small, ashen faced and frail, staring blankly out the window.

‘Mum?’ I asked softly.

She turned her head slowly. ‘Oh. Yeah. Have a good day, Danny.’ She smiled, but it didn’t really reach her eyes.

‘Yeah. Thanks.’ I tried my hardest to smile back, but I guess it didn’t reach my eyes either. Soon, she’d turned back to the window and I’d lost her again.

I walked to school, dragging my feet. My new high school sucked, truth be told. I didn’t know anyone, and I’d never been the best at making friends. Since Mum and I had to move, I had to change schools and leave the few friends I had behind. The commute would have been too expensive.

School was only a ten minute walk from our housing estate, but that was also the only good thing about it. This was a rougher neighbourhood, and so were the people. I found this out the hard way in my first week when a group of year eleven boys cornered me in the loo and stuffed my head down the toilet. I tried to see it as a rite of passage, a welcome to the school. At least that way I knew where I stood.

I didn’t tell anyone about it. Keeping my head down and staying out of trouble was a time-honoured survival tactic. I wasn’t about to abandon it now. Not when I needed it more than ever.

I never knew what it was about me that made other boys hate me so much. It was like they could see that I was different from them. I don’t really dress differently or have a striking appearance. I’m kind of nondescript. Normal looking, you know? Ordinary. You’d think a scrawny black kid would have an easy time blending in at a school like this. You’d be wrong.

I was slight for my age, but not tiny. I’m reasonably clever, but not clever enough to stand out. I used to be a bit chubby, but the past few months had lost me all that weight. I ought to have been able to blend into the crowd, but somehow whenever bullies were present I stood out like a sore thumb.

Maybe they could just smell the gay on me. Some kind of uncanny straight boy bully gaydar.

Back in my old school I had some friends. Mostly girls, but a couple of guys as well. I never told any of them that I liked boys. None of them had contacted me since I moved away. I guess they were all busy.

It was early October now, and I’d been in my new school for about a month. I kept trying to keep my head down, and for the most part people ignored me, but sometimes the bullies would take notice of me and follow me somewhere they could press me for money (of which I have none) or just kick me for laughs. I’m proud to say I took my beatings like a champ.

A gust of wind chased through the school yard as I entered, and I hugged myself against the chill. I stared straight ahead, walking purposefully towards the front door. I had almost reached the relative safety of the school building when someone bumped into my shoulder, hard.

I gasped and grabbed my shoulder, and against my own better judgment I looked up.

The older boy looking down at me had steely grey eyes and short cropped sandy hair. He sneered. ‘Watch where you’re going, faggot!’

I felt my cheeks burn. I looked down, muttered, ‘So–sorry . . .’ and began to walk forward again, but the boy grabbed my shoulder.

‘What sort of apology do you call that, fuckface?’

‘Patrick!’ The voice that had spoken was friendly and cheerful, but I thought I detected an edge of disapproval. No doubt it was my imagination. This was a voice I knew very well.

My bully turned his head, hand still grasping my shoulder. ‘Hey, Mike,’ he said.

The other boy came to a halt before him. He stood tall and broad shouldered, with brown hair to just below his ears and sparkling green-blue eyes. ‘Listen, I forgot my notes for our lab project at home today. Could I look over yours before class?’

Patrick looked like he wanted to tell him to piss off, that he was busy, but one did not simply say no to Michael Storm. ‘Yeah, all right,’ he said, and reluctantly let go of my shoulder, turning away.

Before walking off, Michael flashed me a broad, good-natured smile, and for a moment I felt like I was going to melt. Then he turned away and was gone, and I got my wits about me enough to start moving again.

Michael was the exception. The one person in the entire school who neither bullied nor ignored me. It seemed that Michael had managed the impossible: to be a decent person and still be popular.

I had no idea what he was even doing in this school. I’d overheard people saying that he lived in a large, fancy house with his parents and older sister, right on the edge of where the area turns from working class housing estates to middle class suburbia. His parents were wealthy, and Michael was a good student, so he could have had his pick of any independent school he liked. Yet he picked his local comprehensive—a cesspool of drinking, violence, and teenage pregnancies—and nobody seemed to know why.

This was not the first time Michael had magically appeared when I was being bullied. Complete coincidence, no doubt, but the fact remained that when Michael was nearby, nobody bothered me, as though his mere presence made people want to be nicer. Michael was the only person who ever smiled at me, and it was as if that smile was telling me, ‘Cheer up! Stay strong! It will get better.’

We had never actually had a conversation, of course, and odds were that Michael didn’t even know I existed. He probably smiled at everybody. But his smiles were a comfort nonetheless.

I had only been at school for a couple of weeks when I started having dreams about him, and by the time October rolled around I was forced to admit that I had fallen utterly and hopelessly in love. Which was just like me, really, falling in love with someone who didn’t even know I was there. Safer in the long run, though.

* * *

‘Right, lads.’ Mr. Griffiths twirled a volleyball between his fingers and looked out at us. ‘The girls have been sent on yet another “here’s how not to get pregnant” lecture this morning. Seems to me you lot should be attending those as well, as it takes two to tango, but that’s not my call.’ A few sniggers rose up from the assembled fourteen and fifteen-year-olds. I kept quiet. ‘So, today we’re just going to have a friendly game of volleyball. Daniel, Loz, help me set up the net. The rest of you, split into four teams and we’ll make a bit of a tournament out of it.’

I followed Loz, a burly kid a foot taller than me who had nevertheless never given me any trouble, and Mr. Griffiths into the equipment room. Griffiths dug out the volleyball net and instructed us to go set it up. I was a bit too short to reach the highest anchor point and struggled on tip toe for about a minute before Mr. Griffiths showed up at my side.

‘Here, let me give you a hand with that,’ he said, giving me a friendly grin, and helped me get the net up. ‘There we are. All done.’

Loz and I returned to the rest of the class. Two of the teams were complete, with four people in each, while the other two, led by Aziz and Alec respectively, had three.

‘Dibs on Loz!’ said Aziz the moment we joined them. A collective grumble rose from Alec’s team.

‘No fucking fair, man!’ said Alec. ‘You’re sticking us with this loser?’

Aziz grinned. ‘You snooze, you lose, bruh.’

‘Oi, what’s this then?’ came Mr. Griffiths’s voice. ‘Can’t you lot play nice?’

‘No one wants Hartman on their team, sir,’ said Alec flatly, crossing his arms over his chest and looking resolutely away from me, like I was something nasty he’d found at the bottom of his shoe.

‘Well, too bad for you, because everyone is playing.’ Mr. Griffiths looked between Alec and Aziz. ‘Right. Aziz and Alec, you two will team up with Loz and Daniel. You four,’ he indicated the remaining members of Alec and Aziz’s respective teams, ‘you’ll form the fourth team.’

There was no small amount of grumbling from Alec and Aziz at this arrangement. They glared daggers at Griffiths’s back as he walked away to get the ball, but this was nothing to the looks they shot me. Clearly they felt that this was my fault. Maybe they suspected me of convincing Griffiths to come up with this solution.

I couldn’t really blame them, though. PE was by far my worst subject, a fact that was amply demonstrated when we started playing. We lost the first match, but miraculously won the second thanks to Loz’s height and Aziz’s speed. This didn’t stop my team from shouting abuse at me every time I missed a serve, though, or the opposing team from mockingly singing my praises for the same. We lost our final match, landing us in third place.

Thus it was under the taunts of my teammates (mostly Aziz and Alec, but clearly I had now given Loz a reason to hate me as well, though he was less vocal than the other two) that I headed toward the changing rooms once the lesson was over. This was the worst part of any PE lesson. I’d always been rubbish at PE. I was used to dropping the ball and getting picked last for teams, but the changing rooms afterwards . . . I was grateful that PE was the last lesson before dinner break on Mondays, because that meant that I could hide in a corner until everyone else had finished in the showers, and save myself the embarrassment of potentially popping a stiffy in front of everyone. I wondered idly while I played with my phone whether this was something every gay teen had to deal with, or if I was just unusually depraved.

When the last of my classmates were getting dressed I finally began to remove my own clothing, and by the time I stepped into the shower, the changing room was empty.

As the hot water poured over me, my thoughts wandered involuntarily to Michael again, as they so often did these days when I was alone. I thought back to the way he’d smiled at me that morning. Which was inconvenient, because the image made me feel that familiar tightening in my lower abdomen. Rinsing shampoo out of my hair, I willed the hard-on to go away, but it seemed to have a mind of its own, and when it still persisted once my body was clean of soap suds, I figured I might as well have a wank and get it over with. I was alone, after all.

Like I had done so many times before, I pictured Michael in my mind. Tall, strong, perfect Michael, with his bright eyes shifting in greens and blues and his flawless hair. Michael smiling at me, taking my hand, pulling me close and kissing me. I had only ever kissed one person before—a girl, at a party. Michael would feel nothing like that. I pictured his lips, tried to imagine how he would taste.

Supporting my weight with my free hand on the tiled wall, I sped up the motion of my hand, breathing becoming laboured. My breath hitched in my throat; I was close now.

‘Fuck!’ I whimpered. ‘Michael!’ And just as I shot into my hand with a groan that echoed off the tiles, I heard someone clear their throat behind me and froze.

Frantically, I cleaned myself, trying to look casual (which is really hard when you’re cleaning cum stains off the wall), before I turned my head, most of my body still facing the wall.

Mr. Griffiths gave me this unreadable look, something like surprised amusement. Thank God my skin is dark enough to hide a blush. Griffiths cleared his throat again, looking away. ‘I, er . . . I’d like to see you in my office, please, Daniel. If you have a minute.’

I nodded mutely, and Mr. Griffiths inclined his head before turning away and leaving me alone. I let out a breath I hadn’t realised I’d been holding and let my forehead come to rest against the cold tile for a few moments before turning the water off. I dried myself off and got dressed in my uniform as quickly as I could, before grabbing my kit and walking to Mr. Griffiths’s office, just off from the gym. I knocked, an uneasy feeling in my stomach. Was I about to be reprimanded?

‘Come in,’ said Mr. Griffiths, and I stepped inside. The PE teacher looked up and smiled. ‘There you are. Have a seat.’ As I sat he reached for a tin sitting in the bookshelf behind him (I noted titles such as Complete Teen Fitness and How to Motivate Brats to Exercise) and offered it to me. ‘Biscuit?’

I shook my head. ‘No thanks.’

Griffiths shrugged and took one for himself. ‘You only started here this term, right?’

‘Er, yeah.’

‘Do the other boys often give you a hard time?’ He regarded me with piercing eyes roughly the colour of glaciers. I just shrugged in response, looking away. His eyes made me uneasy. ‘You prefer to stay late and shower alone?’ he pressed.

I shrugged again. ‘Sometimes.’

‘Does it feel safer?’ When I still gave him no reply, Griffiths sighed. ‘This school tries to have a zero tolerance bullying policy, but as I believe you’ve experienced for yourself it doesn’t really work. But I’d like you to feel safe in my class, Daniel. If someone’s bullying you, giving you a hard time or hurting you in some way, you can talk to me about it. And if you don’t feel comfortable talking to me, the school has a guidance counsellor, a school nurse, and about thirty other capable teachers and members of staff who want to help you.’

I nodded. ‘I know. Thank you, sir. But I’m fine, really.’

Griffiths looked very much like he wasn’t buying that for a second. ‘And how are things at home?’ he asked after a moment.

‘Fine,’ I lied automatically, and left it at that.

Griffiths ran a hand through his short blond hair and gave a frustrated sigh. ‘All right. If you say so.’ He gave me another long, unreadable look and then said, ‘Right, then. You best go get some food before it runs out.’

I nodded and stood. ‘All right. Thank you, sir.’

‘Any time, Daniel.’

I was halfway to the cafeteria before I got jumped. Aziz, Alec and a boy called Jason dragged me into a bathroom where Alec delivered a punch to my gut that caused me to double over in pain.

‘That’s for being shit at volleyball,’ he hissed. He raised his fist again. ‘What did you tell Griffiths?’

I coughed. ‘What?’ I croaked.

‘I fucking saw you go into his office!’ said Jason.

‘Yeah, so what did you tell him?’ Alec waved his fist threateningly.

‘Nothing!’ I insisted, quite truthfully. ‘He asked me to come see him after class, but I didn’t tell him anything, I swear!’

Aziz grabbed my shirt collar and slammed me back against the wall, hard. It almost knocked the breath out of me again. ‘You better not have, you stinking little twat!’ he growled. ‘Or there’ll be worse than this coming.’

As if on cue, Alec punched me again, and then all three of them left. I sank down to the floor, clutching my stomach and trying to catch my breath, hating myself for the tears that welled up in my eyes.

This was what I had been trying to avoid. I sat there for a few minutes as the pain dulled, before finally glancing at my watch. Only twenty minutes left of the break.

I might as well just skip dinner.

Copyright © 2016-2019 Thorn Wilde; 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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Some things are absolutely universal truths. One of those truths being that high school is some kind of unadulterated hellscape in which children teach each other the most effective means of ruining each others' lives.
Thorn, you've done a wonderful job of capturing the spirit of what it is to be a teenager in public school again. Daniel is instantly believable as a character, and almost anyone should be able to recognize someone who fits Daniel's archetype in their own lives.

 

Very interested to see where you take this, especially the currently one-sided romance between Daniel and Michael.

  • Like 2

I loved Daniel from the moment I met him. I immediately empathized with his plight, but it's his subtle and dark humor that makes him so endearing. Daniel is a special person, even if he doesn't see it himself. He's a "survivor", not a mere "victim". His life sucks, he gets hurt, he cries, but he still has what it takes to make it out alive--believe it or not. And once a certain love interest gets to know him...

 

Michael Storm won't know what hit him!

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On 07/10/2016 04:14 AM, Dayne Mora said:

I loved Daniel from the moment I met him. I immediately empathized with his plight, but it's his subtle and dark humor that makes him so endearing. Daniel is a special person, even if he doesn't see it himself. He's a "survivor", not a mere "victim". His life sucks, he gets hurt, he cries, but he still has what it takes to make it out alive--believe it or not. And once a certain love interest gets to know him...

 

Michael Storm won't know what hit him!

He's a good kid, Daniel. Many would give up, but he doesn't.

On 07/10/2016 03:00 AM, Hunter Thomson said:

Some things are absolutely universal truths. One of those truths being that high school is some kind of unadulterated hellscape in which children teach each other the most effective means of ruining each others' lives.

Thorn, you've done a wonderful job of capturing the spirit of what it is to be a teenager in public school again. Daniel is instantly believable as a character, and almost anyone should be able to recognize someone who fits Daniel's archetype in their own lives.

 

Very interested to see where you take this, especially the currently one-sided romance between Daniel and Michael.

Thank you! Glad you like the story so far. I enjoy writing Daniel. He feels very real to me. :)

On 07/25/2016 04:28 PM, Dylan said:

The second-hand embarrassment almost killed me. He just had to exclaim Mike's name, didn't he? Poor Danny.

I love Daniel already and it hurt me when he got beat up at the end there. If only I could become a character in this story just so I could kick some ass!

Anyhow, I enjoyed this chapter and I'm excited to see where the story leads! =)

Thanks! I'm glad you enjoy the story, and that you like Daniel. He's a sweet kid. :)

On 08/05/2016 02:07 PM, Lisa said:

Thorn!!!!!! How are you????

 

I'm so glad I was able to start this story! I love it already!

 

Poor Danny. He has a hard life. And now he has assholes at school who are beating him up. For no reason at all.

 

I'm looking forward to reading more. :) Which of course, I'm gonna do right now. lol

Hey Lisa! Awesome to hear from you! I am well, thank you. :) Glad you've decided to give my story a go. Hope you continue to enjoy it in spite of the angst. :P

I have the feeling that this story has been posted for so long that the author has ceased to refer back to the comments, so I will not be making any unless the author contacts me and expresses an interest in those I might make, but just for any American readers I will make an occasional comment translating British into American. For example. a 'housing estate' is a large building of perhaps 20-25 stories containing many small apartments built by the government to assist in slum clearance. These apartments are cheap to rent and not very desirable, but better than living in pasteboard shacks. They quickly developed a reputation as hotbeds of crime and dilapidation. There are a few 'housing estates' which are better designed and offered to higher end occupants.

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On 11/2/2018 at 4:27 PM, Will Hawkins said:

I have the feeling that this story has been posted for so long that the author has ceased to refer back to the comments, so I will not be making any unless the author contacts me and expresses an interest in those I might make, but just for any American readers I will make an occasional comment translating British into American. For example. a 'housing estate' is a large building of perhaps 20-25 stories containing many small apartments built by the government to assist in slum clearance. These apartments are cheap to rent and not very desirable, but better than living in pasteboard shacks. They quickly developed a reputation as hotbeds of crime and dilapidation. There are a few 'housing estates' which are better designed and offered to higher end occupants.

 

This is correct. Also, I will never stop reading, replying to, or considering my readers' comments, so feel free to make them. :) 

Marty

Posted (edited)

I am always wary about starting to read novels that have been in progress for several years and not yet completed, but this opening chapter has set the scene for what looks to be a very enjoyable read. I shall slowly make my way through the remaining chapters and hope that by the time I finish them Thorn will have published the final chapter. :)

 

From Mr Griffith's questions it seems that he is aware of the fact that Daniel is being bullied, and that his home life may not be perfect. And the fact that he mentions the school's zero tolerance anti-bullying policy, the guidance counsellor, school nurse, and the thirty or so other capable members of staff, gives me hope that the rest of school establishment are also aware, and that school will turn out to be a safe and caring environment for Daniel.

Edited by Marty
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36 minutes ago, Marty said:

I am always wary about starting to read novels that have been in progress for several years and not yet completed, but this opening chapter has set the scene for what looks to be a very enjoyable read. I shall slowly make my way through the remaining chapters and hope that by the time I finish them Thorn will have published the final chapter. :)

 

From Mr Griffith's questions it seems that he is aware of the fact that Daniel is being bullied, and that his home life may not be perfect. And the fact that he mentions the school's zero tolerance anti-bullying policy, the guidance counsellor, school nurse, and the thirty or so other capable members of staff, gives me hope that the rest of school establishment are also aware, and that school will turn out to be a safe and caring environment for Daniel.

I'm afraid you'll find that Daniel has a lot of trials yet to face... But I promise a happy ending!

On 7/9/2016 at 7:00 PM, Hunter Thomson said:

high school is some kind of unadulterated hellscape

Yes, high school is a jungle and you have to tread carefully to avoid the wild animals. Daniel is not very good at surviving. Why? Because he is too self-depricating, which is not a great character trait. He tells us, "...my first week when a group of year eleven boys cornered me in the loo and stuffed my head down the toilet. I tried to see it as a rite of passage, a welcome to the school." He really is kidding himself. I do feel sorry about the bullying, but he has to find his way out, not just attempt to somehow justify it. It is as if Daniel believes everything his his fault.

On 7/9/2016 at 8:14 PM, Dayne Mora said:

his subtle and dark humor that makes him so endearing.

Daniel is endearing, he survives by accepting abuse, so it's easy to see where the dark humour comes from, but his state of being is not good. He desperately needs somebody to help change things, I can't see him doing it alone.

This was a great opening chapter, super characterisation, great dialogue, nice pace, what isn't there to like about this story and the writing style. It is very accomplished, what you might call, "a cut above" the average story.

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5 hours ago, Talo Segura said:

Yes, high school is a jungle and you have to tread carefully to avoid the wild animals. Daniel is not very good at surviving. Why? Because he is too self-depricating, which is not a great character trait. He tells us, "...my first week when a group of year eleven boys cornered me in the loo and stuffed my head down the toilet. I tried to see it as a rite of passage, a welcome to the school." He really is kidding himself. I do feel sorry about the bullying, but he has to find his way out, not just attempt to somehow justify it. It is as if Daniel believes everything his his fault.

Daniel is endearing, he survives by accepting abuse, so it's easy to see where the dark humour comes from, but his state of being is not good. He desperately needs somebody to help change things, I can't see him doing it alone.

This was a great opening chapter, super characterisation, great dialogue, nice pace, what isn't there to like about this story and the writing style. It is very accomplished, what you might call, "a cut above" the average story.

Thank you, Talo. I appreciate that. I’m glad you’re enjoying the story. Daniel certainly has a lot of issues, as you will come to learn as yoU read further. He’s a complex kid. I don’t think he’s justifying the bullying, exactly... just accepting it as something that is. As someone who was bullied my whole childhood and learned how futile it was to try and fight back, I wish I had been able to just accept it the way Daniel does, though he has other reasons for avoiding conflict as well.

Thanks for reading and taking the time to comment! :) 

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