Dost thou love life, then do not squander
time, for that’s the stuff life is made of. – Benjamin Franklin
It is always just
so damn cold. That is what surprised Jeremy most when he had arrived at Holdale
correctional facility. There was just no getting away from the cold. He noticed
in those first days, in the ones that had been there the longest. Cold. They
were all so cold. They would sit in their grey cell and just shiver.
The room where the guests of Holdale saw
visitors was at the epicenter of the facility. It was painted what the paint
crew called “smoke embers”, (they had a flare for the dramatic,) and what the
inmates referred to as more grey. It was a small room separated into cubicles
that was again separated by glass. Inside each one was two mismatched chairs,
that had been purposely made so that one leg was longer then the other as part
of an experiment that the in-house physiatrist was performing.
The Warden’s wife
upon seeing the room decided that it was in real need a ladies’ influence. This
“ladies influence” consisted of a fresh linens frebreze being placed in every
stall. Unfortunately, this policy did not last long as an agitated inmate tried
to use the fresh linens frebreze as pepper spray. This angered the Warden and
the guard, who had received the frebreze to the face, and this policy is no
longer in place.
Jeremy was young,
but prematurely graying. The guards liked to joke that his time with them was
causing him to blend in with the walls. He was thin and tired looking but
always menacing.
Jeremy found
himself shivering in one of the frebreze free cubicles on a Tuesday. He had
never liked Tuesdays, even when he wasn’t a resident of Holdale, there was just
something about them that made him sure that it was going to be a bad day.
Jeremy
felt the familiar ball of regret and anger and rage and something else begin to
form in his throat as he sat there on this Tuesday. He couldn’t control it any
longer. It was a monster that he had let breed inside of him. All the late
nights where he had sat up just thinking it had grown and emerged from the dark
recesses of his brain, of his heart. This beast of emotion flooded into the
forefront of his being.
It consumed him
like fire, like the fire he had watched from afar. He remembered the heat on his
face and the smell. The smell of things when they burn.
Jeremy, though his
thoughts made him ache, remained motionless. He sat, surrounded by grey,
waiting. He was waiting for his best friend and older brother, Josh to visit
him. It would be Joshes first visit to Holdale even though it was Jeremy’s 117th
Tuesday on the inside.
Jeremy felt the
fire inside him die down. He was almost sad to see it go because when it was
gone his listlessness returned. From where he was sitting, he could see the one
mandatory window for every 5 yards in Holdale. Jeremy could see through it the concrete. He hated concrete
but the world seemed to love it.
What a waste, what a tremendous, epic, terrible waste.
School had always
been easy for Jeremy; his teachers said he could do whatever he wanted if he
just applied himself. And Jeremy knew what he wanted. Josh had laughed when he
had told him. He had said what a waste was time. But Jeremy didn’t think so. He
wanted to be a landowner, a farmer, someone who lives off the land. After high
school, he was going to work hard, save up and spend his precious time on his
farm somewhere in Kentucky.
That was the plan
that had always been the plan.
The fire rushed back into him, it
burned horribly, his whole body tinkled from the pain of it as the fire lapped
at his arms and legs.
Josh
had been the good one and he knew it. Jeremy was the screw up, the mistake that
no one took seriously. Josh knew this, he
knew. He knew just what to say to get Jeremy to do what he said. He
remembered those times when they were young, he seemed so much bigger then him,
so much more sure. There was love in there relationship at one point or at
least admiration.
Jeremy
felt his fingers twitching, he was trapped. Trapped, stuck, forced to be
wasting time, his time. Time that he had planed to use so meticulously when he
was young.
He
knew that he could only blame himself for being in here. He thought it was the
right thing, to prove that he was a man. To prove he put family first but that
all felt so wrong now. He had made
the mistake, the mistake to trust to love even. Why had he wasted anytime doing
that.
Jeremy
looked at his wrist. There was no watch there but one had resided there before
his incarceration. Josh was late,
late just like that night with the fire. Jeremy had been mad because he had to
walk home in the cold and he never liked the cold.
Jeremy
forced his eyes on the window again not seeing the concrete fields but acres of
land that could have been his, if the time had been right. The time was never right 1,182,940
minutes he had spent in jail. Josh had spent 1,182,940 minutes getting his
degree, getting married and starting a family. He had even bought a farm….
The
Fire burned bright. The sirens.
The people everywhere. Jeremy felt time melt away and he was transported back
to that night. Where was Josh? That was all he cared about. So what if his home
plus half the block was on fire, where was Josh? Ciaos was the master of that
night. Jeremy pushed passed his neighbors who were blacken by soot but didn’t
care, they were too busy watching their houses burn.
Jeremy
found Josh on their childhood bus stop, sitting. He was the only person on the
street that wasn’t looking at the fire.
Jeremy
began to shift his chair from one leg to the other trying to balance it. It
wobbled, just as the physiatrist knew it would.
Why
had he agreed? Just given up. Thrown away his plans, thrown away his life all
for what? His brother. His goddamn pyromaniac brother.
Even
than he had not understood why. Why light there childhood home on fire? But
Josh had. He waited until Jeremy
went out for his unpleasant Tuesday appointments. He had said he just wanted to
see how it felt. How it felt to hold a lit match in his hand, to drop it on the
stack of Jeremy’s comic box collection.
Jeremy
knew that he would not let his brother go to jail; after all he was the good one.
The one that everyone thought would succeed. That was 2 years ago.
Jeremy
had always been hyperaware of time. And even without a clock he knew his
brother was late. Where was Josh? He looked around the grey room and spotted
the guard that had brought him down to this room.
“When
will my visitor be allowed in?”
barked Jeremy.
The guard made his way toward
Jeremy with his hand on his taser. Jeremy made guards nervous.
“Its
seems that your brother won’t be coming today.” As the guard said that he shifted back, he had been trained
not to show fear but this guard was a little rusty.
“When
is he coming?” Whispered Jeremy.
“I dunno they told me to take you
back to your cell and to tell you that he has unfortunately had to reschedules
indefinitely.”
The
fire consumed Jeremy once again.
Evie, this piece was very creative, although I had to re-read it several times -- I'm still not sure if I fully understand it in the way that you intended. It was rather confusing how you jumped back and forth from Jeremy to Josh and their ties to fire. It sounds like Josh is the pyromaniac, but Jeremy is the one who constantly envisions flames and the smell of burning things. (Or is that irony, and I'm just too thick to catch it?) There were also several mistakes that were somewhat distracting and took away from the focus of the story (misplacement of commas, awkward sentences, *then* vs *than*, etc). Besides that, you did a great job developing Jeremy as a character and allowing us to look into his thoughts/feelings. It was clear that he regrets that he took the fall for Josh because he is now wasting away precious time of his own life (tying back to the proverb you chose). However, other than regretting his choice, does Jeremy resent Josh? His thoughts indicate that he does, but he still asks the guard as to when his brother will visit. Why is that? Does he now love life through his brother by allowing him to be successful and happy?
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