I'm currently writing

Chatterbox: Inkwell

I'm currently writing

I'm currently writing a story, and I would like to post it here. Unfortunately, on the first thread I made about it, someone impersonated me and told the Admins to delete it. So I'm going to repost everything.

I'm too salty to rewrite the whole original introduction, but I would like to point out that many of the main characters in this are LGBTQ+. If that was the reason whoever the impersonater was told the Admins under my name to take it down, then I cannot say how awful that is.

Please don't do it again. To me or to anyone. It feels super, super, super bad. It feels like you're being taken advantage of. Like you're not being regarded as a person. 

If you don't like this story, don't read it. That doesn't mean you should steal someone's identity and demand for someone else's hard work be deleted.

Thanks. Here's part one again.

-----  

It was one of those things that he never expected to change.

Suddenly it did, and it felt so right that he didn’t question it. And it changed again and again, but he scarcely noticed that everything was different because he was all caught up in the swirl and excitement and joy of living.

Then one day, he was hanging upside down from a branch on that big tree in the backyard that Liza joked would never stop growing and one day swallow up the house and all of Los Angeles. He was holding his phone (tightly, lest he drop it) and laughing as he typed out a text to Jack and Adri and Theo, when he realized that, indeed, he and his life had become very, very, different since the day three years ago that cute, red-haired, freckle-faced boy had come up behind him after Math and asked if he could draw him.

“You want to know if you can… what?” Alex blinked, bewildered, at his questioner.

“Draw you. Oh, sorry—” The boy said sheepishly. “That was weird, wasn’t it? I mean, you seem like a nice person, and you’re really interesting.”

Alex was at a loss for words, which he thought with a kind of amused awe. Alex Quinn, he had been told and acknowledged himself, was very difficult to shut up.

“No! No! Ugh, human interaction is hard, gosh, I’m sorry— Can we start over?” Flustered, the boy ran a hand through his long auburn curls, the other pulling nervously at the edge of his too-large “Black Lives Matter” t-shirt.

Alex grinned. “Sure. I’m Alex Quinn. Pleased to meet you.”

“I’m Jack.”

They shook hands. Jack’s palms were soft, and even they were covered in freckles, like someone had dumped cinnamon sugar on him.

Alex gathered his binders and notebooks, carefully stacking them in size order. It was a habit, he supposed, but he wasn’t sure where it had come from— Only that it made him uneasy to have it any other way. It was just one of those things.

“So, why did you want to draw me?”

Jack’s hands started fidgeting, fingers tapping his sides in some sort of rhythm. “I’m an artist, I guess, and I’m best at drawing people, and you seem like… I don’t know.” He paused. “You’re really alive, you know.”

Alex paused at his locker, dumping his supplies in it and kicking the blue metal door shut. After considering a moment, he replied, “I’ve been told it’s really hard to get me to stop talking and moving. Or doing anything I want to be doing, really.”

Jack opened his mouth, seemingly struggling with deciding whether or not to elaborate on that, for a moment before closing his mouth and saying, “That’s kind of what I mean.”

Alex could tell that it wasn’t all that Jack had to say, but he left it be.

They walked in silence for a bit, and Jack glanced over at Alex, trying to commit his appearance to memory, all of his expressive hazel eyes and baggy blue sweatshirt and scuffed up converse and easy posture, the way his mouth upturned slightly as if preparing to say something, and that when he did you’d gosh darn better listen.

“Are you new here?” Jack said finally.

“Yeah,” Alex said as they neared the dark oak double doors that led to the dining hall. “This is my first year at this place. I moved during the summer.”

“From where?”

“Doesn’t matter,” Alex replied, a little too quickly.

Jack also took note of the way Alex bit his lip and ducked his head so his dark brown hair fell into his eyes when he said this, stuffing his hands into his pockets. “Catch you later, okay? I have work to do.”

“Okay.” Jack said, and Alex had turned and walked away, hurrying out of the cafe and towards the direction of the library.

Lunch was quiet. Jack sat at a corner table by himself, just like usual, and took out his sketchbook to draw, just like usual. He would sketch people, just glance around and pick the first person his eyes fell on, but this time he drew Alex.

In the first attempt, he penciled out the boy’s profile, trying to capture the peaceable line of his jaw and the way his hair hung down the side of his face, tucked behind his ears. He stopped to analyze it. It wasn’t a bad drawing, but it wasn’t... Alex.

Half an hour and four abandoned doodles of Alex later, he slammed his book shut in a fit of rare frustration. There was something about the guy that he couldn’t quite ensnare, something deep and quiet and real and ragingly beautiful.

Jack was determined to find it.

 

 

Keep writing, Abi! We're excited to see the rest. To the impersonator, we do not tolerate that type of behavior. ~Admin 

submitted by Abigail S., age 12, Nose in a Book
(December 22, 2016 - 12:21 pm)

Will you share it with me?  Tongue out

submitted by Beaver ;), age 13, Maple-syrup land
(February 11, 2017 - 7:33 pm)

I'd love to, gbut I don't think that's possible, since we're not allowed to share email addresses on CB. Sorry. :(

submitted by Abigail S., age 12, Nose in a Book
(February 11, 2017 - 11:05 pm)

Aw, come on.  XD  You know who I am.  Money mouth

submitted by Beaver ;P, age 13, North America
(February 12, 2017 - 5:50 pm)

Waaaaaaait. I KNEW IT! 

...Beaver? The one who is making Em beaver-puffballs on National Beaver Day? The one who plays electric guitar? The one who I once ate a whole bag of cheesy popcorn with on the way back from DTASC?

If this IS you, 1) Hi! and 2) goodness sakes, you could've just emailed me!

If this ISN'T who I think it is, then sorry.

submitted by Abigail S., age 12, Nose in a Book
(February 12, 2017 - 10:01 pm)

haha that took you a while.  and yes.  does marshmallow pie sound familiar? Laughing

submitted by Beaver, age 13, rainbowland
(February 13, 2017 - 6:49 pm)

Dingaling, on the buzzer! I'll share it with you! Ohmygosh, the marshmallow pie nostalgia. XD I'm impressed you found this website! Are you planning to stick around, or nah?

submitted by Abigail S., age 12, Nose in a Book
(February 13, 2017 - 8:12 pm)

xP yas.  ugh you're such a good writer, and i only found a few spelling/grammar errors.  it's such a cute story.  :)  and idk... (i found this from when that person impersonated you)

submitted by Beaver, age 13, idk where weirdos live
(February 14, 2017 - 12:33 am)

This is really good!!! Keep going! (Ps. I am writing a sort-of book that includes a transgender person)

submitted by The Artist, The Art Studio
(February 11, 2017 - 12:14 pm)

Adding on to what Abigail said , jjI just want to say that people with special needs have rights, too. Just putting that out there for people to think about. Not trying to offend anyone or anything. Now carry on with your days.

submitted by The Artist, The Art Studio
(February 11, 2017 - 3:50 pm)

Tippity top top!

submitted by Tooper, age Tooper, Tooper
(February 12, 2017 - 4:37 pm)

“You can? That’s great!” Jack tugged Alex into a hug, and the smaller boy grinned, Halloween animosity temporarily pressed aside amidst Jack’s boundless enthusiasm. “This’ll be so much fun!”

He was so short— compared to Jack, anyway— that his face was pressed into the crook of Jack’s neck. “Mmm-hmmm,” Alex agreed, his voice a little muffled against the collar of his friend’s green bomber jacket.

Alex pulled away first, ducking under Jack’s arm with practiced ease. “Have you seen Adri today?”

“Nah, not yet,” Jack said. “She’ll probably be in English.”

“Want to head there?”

“Sure.”

They walked side-by-side down the hall, and didn’t speak. Alex, for his part, was sort of half-asleep, tripping over his feet more often than usual. He hadn’t slept too well the previous nights, an exhausted result of diving head-on into writing something pointless at one in the morning simply so he could stop feeling the unreasonable sense of dread that always seemed to creep in at this time of year.

“You okay there?” Jack asked, placing a hand on his companion’s shoulder, preventing him from walking headlong into an open door that was sticking out into the hallway.

“Huh? What?” Alex blinked, and realized what he had just been about to do. “Ugh, sorry, I’m just tired. Spaced out.“

“Well, be careful,” Jack said.

“...Yeah.”

If Jack tucked his hand into Alex’s at that point, it was definitely just to make sure he didn’t run into anything.

Alex had always liked the school more in the mornings, before most people arrived. Things were a strange sort of peaceful. He said as much to Jack, who nodded, making a soft sound of assent.

He wasn’t quite sure why he and Jack were holding hands, but he wasn’t about to complain. After a few minutes of trying to figure out how to express the question, Alex decided he was too worn out to be coherent, anyway, and gave up.

They ran into Adri just outside of Ms Young’s room. Her gaze flicked to their entwined hands and she smiled, an aha, there we go! sort of smile and Jack wasn’t sure what to think about it. Adri didn’t press further, however, and there was scarcely a beat before she started to talk about the persuasive essays.

“What are you doing yours on, Alex?” Adri asked a while later when they had made it to their seats, and at the sound of his name, Alex’s head jerked up from where it had been pressed against the tabletop.

“What?” Alex said blearily, then seeming to register the question— “Not sure yet, we don’t have to decide until Thursday.”

Jack was slightly concerned for Alex’s sleep schedule, and from the look Adri gave him, she shared the same sentiments. However, by the time Ms Young entered the classroom, Alex was sitting up straight, if not a bit distant, and let his eyes glaze over only when the teacher’s back was turned.

He was good at pretending. He had done this before. Jack wasn’t sure whether to be reassured or worried by that fact.

“God, does he even sleep?” Jack said to Adri in Science, anxiously chewing on the end of his pencil.

Adrienne grimaced. “I do not know.”

“I’m worried about him.”

“Oui. Alex… “ Adri paused, searching for the words. “He is— rouler à tombeau ouvert. ‘To roll with the tomb open’.”

Jack stared blankly at her. “I’m confused. What do tombs have to do with anything?”

“It’s an expression,” Adri explained. “It is— he does not stop. He will go at breakneck speed until it kills him.”

“You’re right,” Jack said. “I wish you weren’t, but you’re right.”


submitted by New installment!, age 12, Abigail S.
(February 12, 2017 - 10:02 pm)

Awww...

submitted by OtR
(February 13, 2017 - 4:03 pm)

I am speechless with awe. 

This is SO GOOD, Abi! I love the depth and intrigue you're putting into the story and romance! This is amazing! Please keep writing and thank you for putting this up!

-Nianad  

submitted by Nianad
(February 13, 2017 - 1:31 pm)

Toptoptoptoptop

TOOP! 

submitted by Tooper, age Tooper, Tooper
(February 15, 2017 - 8:16 am)

Aaaaack! I love this so much!! That post about the lilies even made me tear up a little bit, and I just want to give Alex a hug <33

This is so good (if you didn't pick up already). I love reading it and I can't wait for the next part!! 

submitted by Clouded Leopard
(February 15, 2017 - 11:58 am)