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When the Rain Stops. (standard:drama, 2999 words) | |||
Author: Nothingman | Added: Apr 07 2002 | Views/Reads: 3249/2249 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
An emotional story of a young mans struggle to come to terms with the death of his father. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story of my hand." "You alright?" "Yeah, try it again." I turn the key to the ignition of my car. The engine coughs and splutters but doesn't start. "Okay, okay hang on." Dad is under the hood trying to fix the timing. I sit in the driver's seat wondering if I should tell him or not. I decide to bite the bullet and call out. "Dad." He answers but his voice is muffled. "I got called into the principal's office yesterday." I wait for a reply but there's none. "Dad." "What the hell did you do?" "Nothing." "So he just called you in for coffee, maybe milk and biscuits?" "No." "Well, what?" "He thinks I graffitied the school crest." "And did you?" "No." "Try the engine again." I turn the key and pump the peddle a couple of times. The engine starts but then dies almost immediately. "Shit. You didn't pump the pedal too much did you?" "No." I start fiddling with my keys. "So did you tell him you didn't do it?" Dad calls out from under the bonnet. "Yeah, of course." "Did he believe you?" "No." "Do you know who did it?" "Kind of." "And he's a friend, right?" "Yeah, kind of." "And you don't want to tell on him?" "Yeah." "Well, if he was any kind of friend he wouldn't put you in that position. Try the engine again." I turn the key a third time and it rumbles to life. Dad walks around; his face is red and sweaty and his hands are covered in grease and blood. He has an accomplished look on his face. "Give it a bit." I put my foot to the accelerator and the engine roars. I smile back. "Cool, thanks." Dad walks up into the house. I kill the engine and follow him in. He's in the kitchen washing his hands. "You have two choices," he says, "you can confess or take the blame yourself." "I'm already aware of that." "You know what my Dad use to say?" I shake my head. Dad cleans the blood of his hand exposing the cut along the back. "He use to say loyalty above all else." "Really?" Dad nodded and replied, "Except honour." I ponder the thought as he dries his hands and finally I reply, "That makes it harder." He gives a wry grin and grabs his car keys "I know, but he was right. I have to go pick up your mother." People are milling around the house. ‘Family and friends' but I don't really know them. Aunts, uncles, cousins, friends and workmates of Dad's. All offering condolences saying what a good man he was. A good friend, great father, loving husband. A bit late now, isn't it? I mean, what good does it do? I know he was a great father, a great friend -- that's what makes this such a tragedy. Why aren't they saying, I wish he was back, why did he have to die, this isn't fair? DAMN YOU GOD. Mum comes and sits next to me, she puts her arm around me and looks into my eyes and I look into hers. I've never seen such pain. Her eyes are red and swollen, her nose flared yet she manages a sad smile. "You alright?" she says on the brink of tears. I nod and say that I am. But it's a lie. Probably the biggest lie I've ever told. My body begins to shiver. My eyes sting and my head begins to pound. I excuse myself and say I'm going to the toilet. My head swirls as if a violent storm is about to break. Pushing past people, I hear faint whispers echoing in my ears, bouncing around getting faster and faster until I can't bear it any longer. I rip at my ears as I crash through the bathroom door. Collapsing to my knees I feel anguishing pain in my stomach, a pain so intense I feel my body shutting down. I think I'm going to pass out. An infinite darkness engulfs me. "I can't believe it. It's not fair, the bastard knew how important it was to me." I was furious. I slammed the bottle of beer on the table. "Don't you dare speak about your father like that; you're just angry." "I'm not angry Mum, I'm disappointed, disappointed at him. He said he was going to come. He promised. I mean, if you can't rely on your father then who can you?" Mum moved closer and clutched my arms; she looked into my eyes and they instantly reached my heart. "He was afraid, afraid you'd be embarrassed." "Embarrassed of what?" "Of not living up to your expectations. You know he hasn't got a mathematical mind like yours. He was afraid he would embarrass you, in front of your friends." I picked up my beer and took a sip, "He still should have come or at least told me how he felt." I turned around to face Mum. "Maybe, but as well as being your father he is also just a man and he makes mistakes ... like everyone." I spit into the toilet and wipe the vomit from my lips with the back of my hand. I feel a cold sweat envelop my body as a drip rolls down my back. Slowly I get up and stumble to the basin. My stomach churns again and I lean into the sink. But nothing comes up. Only a bead of sweat falls off my nose and runs straight through the drain. I turn on the tap and splash cold water over my face. For a second it brings relief, only to be followed by a pounding in my brain. I clutch my head as my legs seem to buckle. I can't handle this. I just want it to go. I want it to be over. Images flood my head, so many images it feels like I'm about to explode. And then suddenly, as quickly as it came, everything vanishes and I feel almost calm. I slowly get to my feet. Looking in the mirror I no longer recognise my own reflection. I stare into the night. The rain is still falling but somehow I can see the stars. Maybe they're just white dots in front of my eyes. I decide to use this calm sensation to advantage. I quietly sneak out unnoticed, grabbing the car keys along the way. I sit in the car and start the engine, rain lashing the windscreen. In a state of strange calm, I know exactly where I'm going. "Dad." "Yeah." "What was Grandpa like?" Dad ponders the question. He sips his coffee as I slowly peel the label off my beer bottle in little strips. "He was a lot like you -- arrogant, annoying, not to mention ugly as a baboon butt." I smile at his joke. He smiles back. "No, seriously." Sitting back in his chair he stares out the window, then replies, "I didn't really know him that well." "What do you mean?" "Well ... things weren't the same when I grew up." "Oh shit, here we go again." Rolling my eyes I await his answer. "Listen, smart ass. All I mean is, kids saw their fathers differently then." "This isn't that respect speech is it?" Dad sipped his coffee and shook his head. "No. Look, I know you respect me, and I respected my father. We just didn't have the same relationship. It's difficult to explain but I guess in my day your father was your father, not your friend. I mean, we both loved each other we, just didn't talk about it." "Do you wish it had been different?" "Not at all. Anyway, it's pointless wishing that something had been different. Focus your energy on the future not on the past." I slam on the brakes and the tyres slid to a stop across the muddy car park. Turning off the engine, I finish off the bottle and get out. The rain lashes my face as the bottle crashes to the ground. I stumble up the path, lightening races across the sky and thunder vibrates through my body. I fall several times but finally reach the top. I stand there and look out across the ocean trying to pinpoint exactly where the vast black ocean meets the abundant dark sky, and with a flash of lighting I see it for a second. But then it's gone. I laugh out loud. "Hah, just like you ... give us a glimpse of something and then you take it away." Wind pounds my body and I use nearly all my strength to stay standing. "Well, I don't accept that. What right have you got to take something away from me?" My throat bleeds as I scream into the night. "I want him back, you hear me, I want Dad back. Say something, damn you. Answer me." A lightening bolt strikes the horizon followed by a horrific clap of thunder. "Is that the best you can do? I want him back or I'll take something from you." I climb over the guardrail, the force of the wind and rain fighting me every inch. "I want my Dad back, you hear me? Give him back or I'll take away what you gave me." My neck is strained as I yell out my threat. Tears are streaming down my face only to be washed away by the beating rain. Looking down, I can just see the waves pounding the rocks below. "This is your last fucking chance. Give my father's life back or I'll take mine," I plead. "I hate you God, you hear me... the last words I mouth to you are I hate you with every breath you gave me." My eyes are burning red as my voice begins to give way. "Oh God, Dad, I miss you so much. I don't want to stay here without you." With my last ounce of strength I whisper the words," I'm sorry Dad." Then I let go. I feel the wind against my body for a second and then nothing. I see the stars above in the night sky, shining like the sparkling eyes. I feel someone is with me, but as I look around I see no one. "Dad?" My voice is swallowed by the night. "Yes." I swing my head around frantically as I recognise my father's voice. "Dad is that you? Where are you? I can't see you." Silence. "Dad?" "I'm in you." "In me? I don't understand." "I live in you now, I live through you. In your smile, in your eyes. In your passions, in your love. In your success and in your failure. That's what being a son is all about. I've given you what I learned just as my father did." "But I want you back." "You know that's not possible. I wish I could come back. So I could hug you one more time, shake your hand and tell you that the greatest honour I have is having a son like you. Watch you get married, hold my grandson in my arms. But now I experience all these things though you. If you die now, so will I." "I just miss you so much." "I miss you too, son, but I'll always be with you, in everything you do. I'm your father and you're my son and nothing can break that bond, not hate, not grief, not death, not even time." "I love you Dad." "I know you do, and I love you too. Now go home and give your mother a hug and a kiss. She needs you." I still remember that morning so vividly. Waking up lying on the ground. The morning sun in my eyes. I got to my feet and looked out as the sun was just rising above the horizon. But the thing I remember the most is not the breathtaking sunrise or the strange circumstances of the night before. The thing I remember the most is the warmth. The warmth of the sun as it lightly touched my face and deeply penetrated my body. Whether I jumped that night or passed out and fell backward I do not know. All I know is that I went straight home and held my mother for as long as I could. I still miss my father and that night did not miraculously cure me of my grief. But everyday more and more I realise how much I'm like him in every aspect of my life. Without him, I would not be me. Tweet
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