I never really was a morning person, but in the past decade it has gotten worse. I slide into my wheelchair and wheel myself towards my kitchen. Out of the window I see the blazing sun beat down on my Denver apartment. Ignoring the weather, I drive myself to the pantry. These days breakfast is mind numbingly basic: some toast with strawberry jam and coffee. While waiting for the toast, my mind drifts back to high school, back to the reason I can’t walk, that fateful day when everything changed.
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Ugh,
I hate Tuesdays, was all that was on my mind on my way to school. My busted
car sputtered as I drove. Even though I understood college debt came before
nice cars, it still irked me seeing my classmates pulling up to school in BMWs
or benzes. I wish I had the kind of money to drive those kinds of cars. But besides that life was good; high school was almost over and the Broncos
won the Super Bowl. I parked my car and walked towards the entrance. The spring
air whistled past me like arrows as I walked into the building.
As I walked I shot a
passing glance at the clock at 8.45; damn, I’m late. I ran through the
halls like my life depended on it for the first time; I hoped nobody would catch me. Thankfully it only
took me three minutes to get to class.
“Eighteen minutes late,
really?” Mr.Desantis emphasized.
“I know, I won’t make it
a trend,” I replied. I liked Philosophy
class, but today was extra dark. We were studying the work of Niche.The only
one who ever liked Niche was Eric, but for some reason he wasn’t here; weird.
The work blows. I should have bailed and not showed up today, but I can’t
afford to miss even a day with the test coming up, so I just have to put up
with it for now. As I finished my thought the bell rang.
I walked out of class
towards the west entrance to go eat lunch. As I walked, I heard a bone rattling
scream come from a girl outside. I wasn’t sure why anyone was screaming. Maybe
it is a senior prank, but no. There
was Eric with a shotgun shooting at the people outside, probably paintballs. I
froze, terrified as I saw blood spray from the girl who screamed; these were
real rounds. The blood droplets spattered across the pavement like paint on a
canvas. Everything after that felt
instantaneous; chaos erupted around me, and screams rang throughout the school
with people racing every which way like insects below a human hand. My lungs
felt like they were exploding as I raced through hallways with only one thing
on my mind, surviving.
When I finally skidded to
a stop at the library, adrenaline was all that was keeping me from collapsing.
I took short and greedy breaths as I tried to calm down, but it was no
good. My instincts would not allow me a second of peace. Then fear kicked back
in as I scrambled to find a desk to hide under. As I bolted to hide, I passed
faces masked with terror, each of them knowing there was a good chance they
would not make it out alive. I was just like them, screaming inside like a
caged animal just wanting to escape. But I put on a brave facade, hoping my
fear didn’t show.
Finally, I slid under a
table. All I could do now was wait and pray that death didn’t come for me now. I
wonder what will I do if I survive, will I go on to be a normal person and act
like nothing ever happened? No, I could never forget this. No matter how
much I try this will never go away, anything but; it will be a constant terror
in my mind for decades.
The only noise was in my
head as a dreadful silence washed over the library. That all went to hell
as boots stomped in the hallway. One thing played over a million times in my
head: I am going to die.
The door creaked and then
opened when two people walked in. With Eric was this nerdy looking blonde kid,
but more importantly, he had a shotgun too. They walked past the counter, and
then Eric started blasting rounds into the computer table, hitting one of the
guys hiding. I could only try not to
think of the shells ripping through him.
Destroying everything indiscriminately, maiming or killing him, I couldn’t
even tell which was worse. I just wanted to run a million miles away. But
something kept me rooted in place despite all my instincts. Then they set down their backpacks and walked
towards the other computer tables. Thankfully, nobody was hiding there. The
sound of glass shattering rang through the air as Eric and the other guy shot
out the windows with their shotguns. My mind raced through possible options: should
I run or should I try and fight: what do I do? I couldn’t bring myself to
decide, nor did I bring myself to move. All I could do was watch
as the blonde kid turned and shot at
the table next to me.
My mind stopped begging me to move as the blonde kid unloaded
buckshot straight into my hip. An ocean of scarlet spread across me, and my
vision became blurry. Is this really happening? Am I going to die like this,
bleeding out under a table? My future is a ‘what if.’ I couldn’t finish my thought before my vision
turned black.
The next thing I heard
ringing in my ear was a mechanical beep coming from one of those heartbeat
sensors they have in movies. I opened my eyes to find myself in a blindingly
white room, not heaven, but one of those obnoxiously colorless hospital rooms
that looks like they have been bleached twenty times. The door opened, and a
cop walked in with some suits. This can’t be good.
“Hello, son, my name is
Larry Shoefeild. I'm the sheriff for
Jefferson County. We are aware that you
saw the shooters and were in class with one of them.”
“Obviously! Now tell me
what the hell happened to everyone else!” I cried out with grief, coating my
words.
“Look, calm down, we will
tell you after you tell us what happened.”
“Fine, Eric was a weird
kid, into a lot of German stuff, working at a pizza place. There was nothing I
saw that would make me think he would shoot up the damn school.”
“Okay, and what about Klebold?” the cop
inquired.
“I didn’t know the kid,”
I retorted. “Now tell me what happened!” I demanded.
“Thirteen dead, twenty-three
injured, and then the shooters killed themselves.”
It was all over the news
that the whole country was focused on Columbine High School. There is no word
in any language that could come close to describing what I felt at that moment.
A strange mix of rage, guilt and sadness swept over me. I couldn’t take what I
heard. I broke down and began to sob. Sorrow held me with a vice grip with
nothing being able to make me even speak, not until I was told I could never
walk again. I should have been a mess, but I was just guilty that I only lost
my ability to walk, not my life like all those other innocent people. But
nonetheless, I was sent back home.
I left that day without
my dignity and pride. I was pushed back with nothing but my life and scars to
show for the hell I had to go through. Life meant nothing to me now; my ambition
and my goals were destroyed. The only thing keeping me going was a never ending
hatred for anyone close to Klebold or Eric. The bastards killed themselves so
they could never suffer for what they did. I was stuck blaming their families
wrongly.
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I wheel myself onto the plane. Destination: Washington D.C. I can’t exactly
march, but I can speak, and speak I will. “Students of America, I appreciate
you coming. I am here because nineteen years ago guns took my happiness. Now I
am here to stop it from happening to you.” A thunder of applause echoes through
the National Mall.
-Cal A.
Callum clearly demonstrated personification when he wrote, “sorrow held me with a vice grip with nothing being able to make me speak.” When he wrote, “I froze, terrified as I saw blood spray from the girl who screamed,” it really painted a good picture of what was going on at the time.
ReplyDeleteCal A, I really like how you used a lot of figurative language in this. A part I really liked was, “The blood droplets spattered across the pavement like paint on a canvas. Everything after that felt instantaneous; chaos erupted around me, and screams rang throughout the school with people racing every which way like insects below a human hand.” This really made me imagine what was happening in that moment. It is not a good sight but really brought it into perspective how terrifying that is.
ReplyDeleteHow the story came to life is that you start the day alluding to the person who did the shooting. Another way it came to life is that you show what the body has an adrenaline rush, and also how your character blacks out during the middle of a thought. As well that your character has one thought in their head as they say, “I raced through hallways with only one thing on my mind, surviving.” This shows that the main character is focus on survival
ReplyDelete