Shattering Point: Part One by orginalcliche
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Every day people in our community look up to the
hill on the west side of town and whisper. They look and they look, but all
they can do is wring their napkins and worry. But worrying didn't save Jeremy_Brooks,
a young blue Gelert whom my pet, Aranel was good friends with, and talked about
often. On the thirty first of the month of Collecting, commonly known as Halloween,
Jeremy and two other friends said that they were going up to the mansion on
east of the hill. The two others emerged the next morning, blurry eyed and confused.
"We's plannin' on goin' in since last year,
but we'n never had the nerve to go bafore this. Jeremy tole me he knows his
way aroun', said nothin' scaired him. It was dark, but I'm never gunna forget
Jeremy's face. He was terrified, we alls were. But the worst part is I can't
remember what we been terrified of. I just keep on seein' his face. All pale
and drained," says Seymour1, one of the pets that accompanied Jeremy.
Sam, a red Yurble, and also a proficient
construction worker said that his brother, Jeremy, isn't usually very foolhardy,
but for some reason he felt he had to do it. "It was still standin' there, must
be for a reason, I don't like this stupid secrecy. I'm gonna find out exactly
why it's still there," said Jeremy by Sam's account.
We must destroy this menace to our community,
this silent stealer of our beloved pets, and we must do it promptly. Whispering
behind closed doors will not do. It is time for progress. It is time to shatter
the mystery.
I crumple up the old Neopian Times article into
a ball quietly and try to toss it into the trashcan. I miss. Slowly, I pick
myself up to put it in where it rightfully belongs. But as I bend down a glint
of something catches my eyes. After putting the wad of yellowed paper into the
bucket I stand up straight to see what is out the window. It is the ruins of
the old mansion.
The mansion stood like a parasite on the hill,
unknown where everything else was known, a shadow where everything else was
bathed in artificial light; it scared me to death. It still does. Even though
now it is a pile of rubble, torn apart eagerly by the hands of construction
workers, it still is the most frightening thing I have ever known. It was the
clearest paradox in the world, a mixture of shadow and light so harsh that it
burned to both look into the light and the darkness. But now, it is gone. Funny,
the only thing I ever wanted was the only thing I ever purposefully destroyed.
I look out of the closed window and grimace,
fiercely aware of the destruction. Even though construction workers tore the
house apart I was the one who shattered it.
I pick up the newspaper and begin to reread
the article, bringing myself to remember everything I have tried so hard to
forget.
*
It was getting darker quicker as each day passed,
and winter pressed its skeletal fingers into fall's flesh. Autumn was now fading
to a distant memory and the large oaks stood bare against the dusk sky. Humbly
the trees quivered with cold, shivering off new leaves with each gust of wind.
I shivered with them; I was only wearing a short summer skirt and a thinly knit
sweater. My owner only shrugged against the cold, she was donned in a thick
red sweater that looked warm and fluffy, though slightly ugly and too big for
her wiry frame. I shivered again. "It's such a run down place."
The grounds were not well kept; the grass was
dry and dead, but gardens were lively compared to the still house. It looked
like an average mansion with a black, shingled roof and rectangular stiff walls.
The fence was wrought of iron and not at all decorative, merely straight spikes
caging the house. As if the owner thought that if the fence wasn't sturdy enough
the house would grow like a curly vine.
It was painted a peeling white and adorned by
tall elegant columns. The columns were almost too tall, freakishly out of proportion,
even though they were still beautiful. Tall beautiful pets that looked like
they should be famous posed in stoic grandeur, entirely lifeless. What artist
could create such cold beauty? "It's not really that run down." I turned to
look at my owner who was dressed in only a short sleeved shirt and a summer
skirt. She must be numb from the cold by now.
My owner shook her head warily, her brown hair
tumbling out of its stiff bun "Perhaps it isn't to you, but to me it looks about
to fall apart."
I expected my eyes to immediately find every
crack, every falling shudder, to prove my owner's point. The last thing I expected
to notice was the shadows. Long lean shadows trailed obediently behind the columns
and statues, still and unmoving as their counterparts, or so they seemed. The
porch was painted a stark white, just to showcase the shadows. They were the
most beautiful thing of all and entirely devoid of any life while still seeming
to move, even while being silent and still.
"It's so majestic," I whispered, admiring its
numerous wooden spires and elaborate gargoyle statues.
"It's so dangerous," she warned, her eyes glinting
with danger.
"No it's not, it's beautiful." I couldn't tear
myself away, I was being drawn in. It was just like every fantasy book I had
ever read; the strange old mansion where something amazing was going to happen.
I could feel 'amazing' in the air, in the house.
Sarah turned from the house abruptly as if I
had just slapped her. Though instead of walking to me, and retaliating she took
a step closer to the house. Perhaps I imagined it, but I saw a tiny flicker
of interest in her eyes. "Do we really have to go over this again, Aranel? Pets
come up here all the time on dares, light fires, get in trouble. Some never
come back."
"They're just stupid then, aren't they?" I mumbled,
angry at Sarah's logical, strict attitude. I too had heard the stories, but
it was just like Sarah to extract only the facts she wanted to use.
"It doesn't matter, Aranel. I refuse to have
people disappear in this community. Promise me you won't enter the house. "
Her gaze shone with fear and worry for me. She drew me up into a warm, comforting
hug. Unsaid promises rang in the air like notes on an out of tune piano.
"I promise." I wasn't even sad before. I didn't
even feel worried about entering, but now fear gripped me. What if I didn't
return from the house? That was exactly what she wanted me to feel, fear. But
I was not afraid. I refused to fear something so beautiful.
I pulled out of her grip; she was smothering
me. Sarah frowned, but made no move to pull me back into a hug. The wind brushed
its coldness against my Kougra fur and I trembled, even though I was in still
warm from Sarah's embrace and rough red sweater.
Any vestige of calm was destroyed the moment
Sam trundled up towards us followed by his rag-tag entourage. With each step
he took, the ground shuddered a little at his large mass. He wore his tool belt
with an unabashed grin, and looked down to it proudly every couple of seconds.
He didn't really need to be that excited about getting something new. I frowned.
Sam was the brother of Jeremy, that Gelert who disappeared. Was he the only
one brave enough to do the job, some village idiot? "A bit unsteady eh, wouldn't
want to enter that meself."
Sarah smiled benevolently, and drew out a bag
of neopoints. Sam's eyes went wide and he nodded to the others subtly. "We'll
first have to do some measurements and such but this little annoying buzzer
should be fly swatted by the end of next week." He grinned at his own 'intelligent'
metaphor with all the grace of a Mortog.
"Sarah," I whispered through my teeth and gave
an annoyed glance to the workers. "You're not really going to let them…" I trailed
off and jerked my head to them.
Sam turned a light pink in the morning light
and flew into a fury. "Dun think I can't hear you missy faerie Kougra. Just
because I ain't all fancy like an' got an nice resume n'all dun mean I'm bad
at tearin' down a house." He stopped, embarrassed to be lecturing me right in
front of Sarah, his employer.
"Yeah anyone can tear down the house," I retorted.
Who was this Yurble who thought he could destroy this magical place without
a care or an intelligent thought? I turned away and felt my face go red with
anger. I tried to take a deep breath but his next words just pushed me over
my edge.
But he didn't stop. "At least I go out and talk
to people. I heard about Aranel, the lonely faerie Kougra who spends all of
her time with her owner and ain't got no friends. She just spends all her time
dreamin'. My lil brother, Jeremy, the Gelert, apparently he tried to play with
you one day but you just pushed him away and told him he was a gruesome Esophagor
with the vocabulary of the Spardle. Oh don' look surprised; every 'un knows
every UN here."
I couldn't breathe; everything he said was true.
Sarah had lied about me in the article she wrote for the local edition of the
Neopian Times. I wasn't a light faerie, setting out to do good in the world
and didn't really like feeling portrayed as one. I felt so alone. Even though
I knew Sarah would fire the Yurble, his words still stung. "Sarah," I whimpered,
but she was just staring at the Yurble, jaw opened as far as it could go. Silence
reigned the cold autumn day with a stiff hand.
And by the time the silence was even slightly
shattered, I was long gone, my feet pounding frantically against the freshly
frozen ground.
To be continued...
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