Darkest Before the Dawn {Pogue}
May 5, 2014 22:34:25 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on May 5, 2014 22:34:25 GMT -5
R A H B E R T E L L I O T “Can you tell me a story?” “What kind of story?” “One where things turn out right.” “Once there lived a boy who was nothing more than average. He lived in a brick house with square windows and a simple door. There were flowers in the garden and green grass in the lawn. He had a mother, and a father, and an older brother. They were pretty much the same as any other family, the parents worked, the kids attended school, and they would all sit around the dinner table in the evening and talk about how their days were. They would take turns washing the dishes, the younger brother standing on a stepstool to reach the sink, and the older standing beside him with a towel. The parents would watch on in contentedness, each one thinking the same thing, but no words were spoken. They would all say their goodnights and head off, the parents to their room and the boys to theirs. The younger boy would ask the older to check under the bed for monsters, and then would crawl under the covers and pull them up to his chin, vibrant eyes wide with wonder and awe. Of course, in the mind of a child, who’s more amazing than the older brother who stands guard through the night, the one who’s invincible? And so the stars shone in the dark sky, and the twinkle of adventure in bright eyes gave way to the realms of sleep, dark hair falling about him like shooting stars. Everything was right.” Sometimes, when things got particularly rough, I would go back to that night, pretending that his bed wasn’t vacant and that my eyes were still filled with adventure. But eventually, I would look out through the open window and realize that my life was far from the stories he told. He was always more creative than I, and no matter how many times I tried to fabricate a reality that wasn’t my own, I couldn’t. I would sit at the polished desk and open the third drawer down, reaching for the notebook that was almost torn apart from rough handling, most of it mine. When I first found it, right after he stormed out, it was in beautiful condition, his initials still engraved prominently on the front. I had been tempted to read the entire thing at once, to throw myself into the void of his imagination, only knowing that I would get lost in it. However, I made myself read it page by page, savoring each word that fell off of his fingertips, as it was the only new and undiscovered thing I had left of him. His stories were that of chaos and confusion, monsters in dimensions that I couldn’t even begin to grasp. It wasn’t until I read these that I realized just how lost he had been, even though he was leading me along a path that I never questioned. It was one night that I realized he was dragging me the same way he had walked, that one day I would become as frustrated as to storm out the door in the same manner that he did. But I wouldn’t do that, not to my parents, and not to him. I don’t really believe he meant to pull me down as well, but he did so in such a subconscious manner that no one realized it. The only way I could make him proud now was to stop, turn around, and sprint in the opposite direction. I had to fill the void that he had emptied for himself, for the stories he wrote only fell though the bottom. I had to fill his fantasies with reality, no matter how harsh it had to be. So when I walked out the door to our home, careful to shut the door quietly, I didn’t walk the way I normally did. I walked to my left, a way neither of us really dared to venture. I walked away from the brick house, with its white windows and wooden door. I walked away from the story that we so often told. “Can you tell me another story?” “What kind of story do you want to hear, Rahbert?” “One that’s realistic.” template by chelsey |