Monday, August 15, 2011

NaNoWriMo Freewrite Practice #2 – Incur Fear


            Logan deathly fears dogs. On account of a childhood event. He goes out to play on the swing that hangs from the big willow in his front lawn. He doesn’t know the tree is called a willow, he is that young. But it has green, spirally tendrils that scrape the air, calmly. The wind picks them up and the looming tree swoons and twirls its willowy fingers around. Logan surveys the tree before approaching it. He sniffs but only smells his own sweat. His mom hasn’t found a deodorant that works for him yet, so he just hopes the other kids don’t pick up on it. But how could they not? He can’t smell the tree, and so he gazes. The willow’s fingers toss up and about, scraping the breeze, and they could catch him. But he just wants to play on the swing.
            And then the right moment arises, when the willows’ arms are distracted by their heights, and Logan dashes. Under a blue sky. He doesn’t heed the ground as his feet propel him forward, his chin up, admiring the great blue that is overcome by the dark green willow spirals, floating above. And that means he’s under the tree, and it can’t reach him now. And he’s arrived at the swing. It’s a wooden one, just a slat of wood. A rope dangles from a branch and comes to a knot through the middle and underneath the slat, like a thread connecting the dead wood to the living tree. A story of origins and ends. Like a little victory over the tree, and rubbing it in the tree’s face, Logan touches the wood slat swing with his index finger, as though pointing. Look, you’ve been killed and defeated and you are now going to serve a simple human purpose only: I will sit on you and rub your face in the dirt. Logan thinks that and sits down slowly, carefully. Maybe the willow could take revenge.
            So he squares his bottom to the slat, his fifty or so pounds nimbly tugging on the willow branch. It sags only slightly, the terrible tendrils lean down just barely closer, edging in, encasing him in a just-tighter living green shroud. And Logan feels a bit safe, strangely. He lightens and sits down heavier, bringing the tree’s arms around him just enough more as to shut out the great blue sky above. He rests in his coronet, prince of the willow and the moment; triumphant, he smiles. It is the first smile in some time, at least since the adventure into the depths of the willow began.
            Logan used to play with Rhett, his redheaded next-door neighbor, under the willow and around the willow. Then Rhett moved away. Logan remembers that they played Nintendo, and it was the first time he’d ever played Nintendo. As he looks up to the spot where Rhett’s second-story room used to be, wherever it would be beyond the encasing willow, Logan reminisces. Even at such a young age, he feels the dull, seeping, withering sting of nostalgia, and it weighs heavy on his brain, like a throbbing if only it manifested physically. His smile fades. Rhett is gone. Logan remembers their back patio with the sharp sunlight casting shadows on the glass table by the pool, like a memory of the future that Logan might one day know, sitting in Los Angeles in his mid-twenties. His mom fed him and Rhett some kind of sandwiches there. He remembers. But Rhett is gone.
            Logan turns away from the hollow second-story placeholder and studies his feet. He will need them momentarily. A dog across the street, far too large to be outside of a zoo, jumps over the wooden fence intended to limit its freedom. The monster cur will not be having it today. And as it leaps over the five foot fence, Rhett would have seen it from his second-story window, but Rhett is gone. So Logan does not have any warning; he gazes at his feet. They are small, which he supposes is suitable since he too is small, at fifty pounds. His feet can only carry him so quickly, and probably faster if not for the fear that guides him, that holds them back. Logan imagines that he’d be the fastest kid in the neighborhood if fear didn’t handicap him. He hears a bark, a gritty growl, emanate from the direction of the street. Logan looks up quickly. A monster cur screams toward him, snapping and biting the great blue air down here at Logan’s level. The dog’s teeth are yellow and veins laminate its gums. It bares its teeth with a ferocity that Logan has not seen, and it keeps its ears pinned back as the beast hurtles toward the boy. Logan can’t run very fast, especially because of the fear that consumes him. And he is deathly afraid of dogs, on account of this very event.
            The ravenous mutt lunges forward, howling, eating the great blue air in a rage, enraged, engaging its target: little Logan. More quickly than Logan can bring himself to cry, the dog shuttles inward with a trajectory that indicates only one thing to Logan: vengeance. What did Logan do? The terrible dog barks monstrously and sends street gravel shuttling backwards behind it as it advances too quickly, Logan-bound. Their eyes are locked. The fear comes over Logan, welling up like an oil rig discovered, blackness oozing upward and out, covering his feet with fear. He remembers Rhett. Rhett is gone.
            The monster cur’s pinned ears rise up, demons consulting their murderous host, Logan-bound. Logan-bound, the awful dog sprints with a vengeance that Logan has never incurred. A gust of wind picks up the willow tendrils, and as the green spirals dance frenetically around him in the liminal space between the great blue air and the great blue sky, the incoming beast traverses the boundary of the previous coronal shroud. The rapacious dog advances into Logan’s close proximity with a single-minded purpose familiar to axe-murderers and psychopaths of the worst variety: love. Logan’s feet kickstart. He is made to jump up, alighting upon the green grass beneath him and crushing it with his meager frame but crushing nonetheless. He has no choice as he cries. He is made to run as his body carries him away from the monster cur, snapping, spewing its devilish hatred. Logan cries, wailing. His feet carry him with the fearful handicap; he cannot be made to run any faster. He yells, crying. As he approaches his house, his arm is made to reach for the door. He cries and his hand pounds itself against the dead, blue, wood door. Please let him in.
            The dog closes in, darting. A cacophony of terror in its velocity. Logan finds himself pounding the door, crying, screaming, wetting himself. The door does not open. And the dog, the hellish monster from across the street, nears. Logan cries and his pants are soaked. He looks behind him at the coming dusk, as the fear swells in him like a thick balloon, pressing his internal organs against his skin from the inside. He turns his head to face his fear, not wanting to but having no other choice. He backs up his butt against the dead, wooden door, the willow’s revenge as it cackles in the distant wind. The monster leaps, its toothy, satisfied, vicious snarl. Logan screams.
            His mom opens the door. He stumbles backward inside. His mom closes the door. The dog howls, barks, pounds against the door. Please don’t let him in.
            Logan sits at the piano bench. The old yellow piano from his grandmother. He knows how to play it. He never played it for Rhett when Rhett was around. Logan’s mom brings a tissue for Logan’s tears. She puts her hand on him and feels his pulse. She notices his pants, soaked. Logan shakes as he cries, saturated with fear. He does not play the piano. He fears dogs deathly.
            The dog walks back to the willow, disappointed in its unfulfilled pursuit. It gnashes its monster teeth, grinding them, growling. It rubs its back upon the willow’s bark. The wind has died. The fear is alive. The monster cur does not know that the fear is alive, though. It lives inside of the house, on the piano bench, behind the wooden, dead, blue, door, next to Logan’s mom, above the wet pants. It is in Logan’s brain, this fear. As the dog rubs its fur against the willow to scratch itself, it is not aware of the fear. But this fear remains.
            One day, Logan will go to Los Angeles, and he will sit in an apartment with a dog. It will be a small dog. He will be miles away from home, from that second-story window where Rhett once was. Rhett will be long gone. And Logan will find himself sitting with the dog, miles away, and he will find himself petting it. Its owners will be gone on vacation. Logan will be compelled to pet the dog, a small dog. It will not be a monster. It will just eat and sleep. Logan will sit with the dog and find himself compelled to pet it, and he will feel a connection to the animal. One that transforms his fear. The black oil slips away. The willow no longer lashes. There will be something there, and it will not be fear. Logan’s arm will guide his hand to pet the dog. It will be a gentle dog.

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