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 Mending Dead Fences

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PostSubject: Mending Dead Fences   Mending Dead Fences IconbMon Jan 26, 2009 2:54 am

Mending Dead Fences
By Kevin "Druzil-MUN"


It used to be that when Donny looked in a mirror he saw…what? He saw in himself who he was, where he came from. It used to be that when Donny looked in a mirror he was proud of his heritage, his upbringing. It used to be that he saw in himself the vibrant colors of the fields he ploughed with his old man, the golden hues of acres of unharvested wheat. He could feel the comfort and warmth of the rippling fields.

He would remember how when he first saw the ocean off the shores of Kauai that he thought it was wonderful how the waves and flow of the sea looked so much like the blowing fields of wheat. And how his father had laughed, a rich and full laugh, and told him he figured that most people would see the wheat fields and say they flowed like the sea. Perspective, his father had told him, was a wonderful thing.

He used to see in himself the days upon days of intense labor in the fields. He was young, but with the muscles of a man for he did a mans work. He would see the green fields of corn, stalks taller than any man he knew, and wonder at how many people his father fed. How many hungry families would have their bellies filled with the produce from his fathers farm.

He used to see in his eyes the very color of life, the purple and pink hues of a giant autumn sun laying to rest nestled in the soft green soy bean fields his father worked every year.

And the scents, the smell of a crisp autumn morning. The smell of a pile of burning leaves filling the countryside, the clean almost sterile scent of a blustery winter day. The air so cold it seemed almost unable to carry a single scent with it. The rejuvenating scent of a spring rain. He’d heard people call the smell "Ozone". He didn’t know what they meant by it, but figured it was as good a word for it as any he could think of. And even the smell of a blistering summers day, the air so full of moisture it was almost like it was too wet to rain. The smell from the cow pasture even made him smile. He was a proud farmer. A proud man.

But as he stood before the mirror today he saw none of that, or rather just the opposite of it. He could see the same pictures but saw them as if they had been touched by the hand of death. The wheat fields were grey, limp and lifeless. The acres upon acres of corn scorched as if by a wildfire. The stalks still burning red inside like the cherry of a cigarette. The sun didn’t set on those fields of soy any longer, for the horizon was filled with smoke and smog to the point of suppressing life itself. These were the visions he saw now. The visions of life on Crystal Meth.
Meth was the scourge of the country. Iowa was the center of the Meth world. An industry fueled by things Donny couldn’t understand had taken root in his state. He’d heard once, before he got hooked, that Iowa was the "Meth Capital of the World". He’d thought that rather unlikely. He knew the local news stations would do whatever they had to in order to get ratings. But they were right. It was a statewide epidemic. Not just in the bigger cities but eating away at the fabric of rural Iowa as well.

This mirror was broken. He thought he had a dim memory of punching it some time ago in a fit of sobriety. But he had been wasted, or in withdrawal pretty much every waking moment for the last 4 months of his life. He’d dropped out of school so that he could get high whenever he wanted. He’d run away from home because he couldn’t look his parents in the eye and pretend he was anything more than a disappointment. He felt ashamed for them, whether they were ashamed of him or not. His dealer had said he could stay at his place. Of course Donny hadn’t realized his place was an abandoned warehouse full of mice, snakes, spiders and the like. Though the animals were the least of his concerns. This was a flophouse for people just like him. A dank, smelly place where the inhabitants thought nothing of defecating where they slept.

Donny had lived there for about a week when he came back one night with a big long mirror. He’d stolen it out of a mini-van, along with some other stuff to sell for more Meth. His dealer had tried to take it away, he didn’t want his customers to see what they looked like for fear that they would all leave, find the courage and strength to kick the habit. Donny pulled a massive knife from the inside of his worn denim coat and pointed it deftly at his dealers throat. He’d told him if he took his mirror he’d kill him. And to his own horror he knew that he meant what he’d said.
This was the only thing that gave him any relief from the pangs of addiction. Even though what he saw in it saddened him, it allowed him to see. When he’d first studied himself in the mirror he was appalled. His once muscular tanned body had grown thin and ashen. And in less than a months time. He couldn’t remember the last time he ate anything other than a candy bar or a morsel of garbage. He forgot those worries though, because he turned to his new friend, Meth.

But this was the beginning of a new chapter for him. He was going to get help. He’d hit rock bottom as they say. He backed away from his mirror lying in a broken pile on the floor of the warehouse. His dealers blood was oozing into the cracks and crevices of the broken glass. He looked down at the body of the man who’d provided him with his fix for what seemed like a lifetime but did not feel any remorse for what he’d done. He promised that he would kill him if he ever tried to take the mirror again. And he’d meant it. He replayed the incident again in his mind. This time watching as if he were a bystander. He watched as his dealer came into the warehouse. Donny saw him glance left then right, trying to be sure he was alone. But he didn’t see Donny, Donny was huddled in a corner under a pile of debris trying to keep warm. When he snatched the mirror Donny scrambled to his feet and charged forward carrying a large stick, a broken tree limb. Before he knew it, it was done. He’d raised that limb and brought it down squarely over the back of his dealer’s skull. The dealer fell forward and landed on the mirror, shattering it. Donny watched him for a while longer but decided the amount of blood pouring out of the back of his head was significant enough to have killed him.

It was funny. The adrenaline rush he’d felt when he struck the dealer brought with it a moment of divine clarity. He was free. His dealer was dead, a fact the entire county should be thankful for. He would not be able to get more meth for a while, that had been the only dealer in the area. He could take that time and check himself into a hospital to get help, and call his mom and dad and beg for forgiveness.

And so it goes for Donny, and many others like him. He got clean, and has been ever since. Nobody ever knew he was the one that killed the dealer. Nobody but his father. He’d told his old man some months afterward while they worked the fields together. His father smiled and hugged him and they never spoke of it again.
These days the color has come back to Iowa for Donny, but it’s not the same. The golden fields of wheat seem dampened, the sunsets not as bright.

A man’s history will always be with him, and the colors of his past will forever bleed into his future.
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XvXKyriahXvX
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PostSubject: Re: Mending Dead Fences   Mending Dead Fences IconbTue Jan 27, 2009 2:04 pm

((oh I like That. Awesome Kevin. And a happy ending. Wish that happened more often in the saga of the battle with Meth.))
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