Wednesday, March 4, 2009

4: Just Another Day

When I got home, my mom saw my bruises and was shocked. She thought it was about attention, but I told her that it’s not like it at all, that I’m just trying to reaffirm my masculinity. She’s been psychoanalyzing me since then. Nonetheless, I ate my dinner, went upstairs and lay on my arms facing the ceiling and listening to Teenage Wasteland by the Who. Then something strange happened. I slept.

I rarely did this. Usually, I spent all night tossing and turning until my body found a spot it could reconcile with . but tonight, I lay thinking of how eventful my day was and how I would be fine with tomorrow being just another day. Finally, I thought of Autumn and fell asleep smiling.
Then I felt swift knives puncturing my ears over and over again until I jumped up like the victim of a violent exorcism. My alarm clock had gone off. I tore it out of the wall and threw it. I truly did hate how it disrupted all of my dreams. Nevertheless I rubbed my eyes and remembered that today is going to be just another day. I took a shower (because I only bathe when I need extra sleep), got out, combed my hair the way I liked it, put on my glasses, and got dressed. I texted my mom before I got to school and when I got there I was ten minutes early. So I started drawing a picture of TVs, stereos, all kind of electronic appliances attacking humans. It had the vibrant colors of a futuristic comic and the cheesiness of a 50’s sci-fi thriller. Then I kicked myself because I forgot the ink at home. The ink from that little brat Miles.

Soon enough, people started filing into class and looked at my drawing. From being me, I’d here a ‘wow’ or a ‘that’s really good’ but I said thanks and kept looking at my art. I never , made eye contact with anyone who gave me a compliment. Then again, this is why I don’t want or need friends, because the only reason they spoke to me was because of the fought. Now they thought I was cool, but it was a one dat thing. Now I was back to being that weird Divide kid.

By the end of class, I had finished my picture with my two favorite parts being a blender with a roguish smile riding atop of a man’s head and a toaster lying on its side, launching toast into people’s mouths. I titled it ‘Two-Pronged Riot’ 9and though I know there are three pronged appliances; I’m still shooting for simplicity.

After art came physical education. Bony and embarrassed, I hated this class the most because I felt so self conscious about my legs in my gym shorts and my arms dangling to my sides like a skeleton for the world to see. We played basketball and I couldn’t seem to get the ball in the hoop, but the guys in the class orchestrated an operation in which every time our very large gym teacher turned to watch the opposing team, we turned our home of basketball into dodge ball. This would last a second but surely we never truly played a game of basketball the whole way through.

Then after that was Reading/English. I never really could seem to get a firm grasp on this class because I was more of a visual learner. And then of course, there was Mz. Alexander. She would scream if you called her miss or misses because she personally thought a woman’s status should stay her business, like men’s. She was a big boisterous woman with so many melodramatics, I pictured her on a red carpet with a big fur coat accompanied by a fuzzy boa, referring to everybody as ‘darling’, or ‘doll face’ or other things like that. I could see her, a celebrity librarian of Hollywood, holding mikes to people saying “No sweetie, it was Samuel Clemens who wrote ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’, Mark Twain was a penname.” Or “Honey, CS Lewis who wrote ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’ not War of the Worlds. That’s HG Wells.” This thought made me smile.

The next class was math where my energetic math teacher showed us ways to use pi to do things like find the radius of a circle. I tended to drone out in his class, but I passed. He always lent a hand and was easygoing when he wasn’t hyper. But when he was, math just seemed to jolt. Everything he did a rapid movement if that makes sense. But today fortunately was just a lazy day. I stared into space and heard the bell ring.

Then came lunch-the most interesting hour of school.

I always sat at a table, facing away from whoever inhabited it. They’d make comment to or about me and whether nice or malicious, I ignored them and continued eating. The principal would always come up to me and tell me to turn my seat around and I always told her I couldn’t because nobody there like me. This usually led to the guidance counseler.

No im sure not everybody I sat with didn’t like me. I’m sure half of them didn’t mind me, but to me this was fun. I ate in the guidance counselers office and she asked my what was wrong. Her checkups usually corresponded to my personality change, so the week I gorged myself I told her I had suddenly developed a intimate relationship with food. After that the week I had my southern drawl, I told her a story of how I was a poor boy from Kentucky trying to make the best our of his fathers crops after that. The business suit week, I told her I was a ghost from the Great Depression who had jumped off of a builing in response to the despair of the stock market crashing. I told her I possessed this sixteen year old child so hopefully I could reaqure my millions. So I tried to keep it interesting every week but I had to open up eventually.

So this week I did.

I held my head in my hands to try to ‘hold back the tears’ and said “Ms. Moore… I have a problem” her voice light and concerned, she asked “What’s wrong Brandon?” .

I looked at her deep in the eyes and said “I think I’m god.”

“God?” She repeated.

“Well, gods.” I replied. “I don’t know if I’m Kronos or Hades or Posiden sometimes. And then…”

“Brandon sit right there.” She cut me off. “Is there actually a problem?”

I sat back “No, but everybody thinks I do.”

“Well Brandon it just seems like you don’t have many friends at this school.”

“I don’t like anybody here.”

She thought about it for a second.

“Well I guess I can understand. You don’t have to like every kid here but…”

“You don’t love every kid here” I retorted.

Her eyes gave me that suggestive look that said I was right. I was a smartass but I was right. This is why I liked Mrs. Moore. She was what I called ‘Discreetly Honest’.

“Well if have any problems, can you find me?” I nodded my head yes and she said I could go. Before I left I told her thanks for putting up with me.

The way that my school worked is that classes alternate during the week. Last period on Monday was Spanish and yesterday was gym. So today would be Spanish and tomorrow would be gym again. On Friday we had music.

So the classes left today were history, library (which was basically study hall) and then Spanish. Spanish was a challenge- not necessarily the test, but the staying awake part. Each day I struggled trying to keep my eyes open but today was even harder, as my teacher quizzed us completely in Spanish, Autumn Ashley Roswell began to hum. As I closed my eyes, I imagined those angels plucking at the harp flawlessly as cherubs danced around them. And as I opened my eyes again, a saw kids filing out of class which meant the forty five minutes were over. I also felt something wet and then raising the arms I was laying on, I realized on them and on the desk was now inhabit by a big puddle of drool. “Buenos tardes, Mr. Divide.” My teacher said as I grabbed some tissues to wipe off the table. “Uh, y tu, hasa luego, Mrs Martinez.” I said sponging the rest of the slobber up before leaving. She just shook her head and smiled as I hurried out of class but I need to do something.

I could spend my whole life obsessing over her; I needed to do something to show her I cared. Mrs. Moore was right, I needed friends and if she wouldn’t be my girlfriend, then we could still be friends at least. I couldn’t write her a people because I’m not that kind of guy. So I had to do what I did best.

I grabbed the ink that Miles dropped and opened up to a picture of Autumn. I filled an empty pen with the ink and began drawing.

When drawing with a pen, there wasn’t any room for error. She was my Sistine chapel, I was her Michelangelo, twisting my body in all different ways to make her perfect. My hand stayed steady to make sure to mimic every complimenting curve line and shade she had. And after about an hour and twenty minutes, I was almost finished. I stretched in my chair and as I went to swing my hand back to the hand, a knocked a glass of water onto my picture. I screamed, numerous obscenities spewing from y mouth, I threw the glass. It smashed against the door and I had to pick up the pieces, but when I went to throw it in the garbage can behind me, I dropped the glass again.

Before my eyes, the ink on my paper began to rise, showing the deformed face from the paper. Black lines from the paper all seemed to be floating in the air, the water marks making her look grotesque. Her smooth lips before were now stretched out, Out her button nose like a pigs, and her eyes smeared around her face. As I realized I couldn’t leave my room because I would steep on the glass, the monster which used to be Autumn opened its disk-sized bottom lip and its fissured pallet and called my name.

The way she said Brandon made me wish I didn’t have a name at all. It was obscure like the sound of pigs squealing inside of a slaughter house- a language of that female screeching from horror moves. Her eyes grew bigger and hit the top of her hairline) they were at her forehead before) and I reacted, grabbing a trashcan and throwing it at the monster. My small metal bin hit the thing, making a noise and contact, but all that would happen is that its lines would scatter and drift off and then within seconds, it would reform its shaper.

Now I knew the pattern, I had to make my move.

“Brandon! Brandon!” the monster began forming my name and closing in. quickly I bounced on my bed, rebounding to the other side of where I picked up my hard copy version of Orson Scott Card’s “Ender’s Game.” I hurled this also at the monster, causing it to break into pieces. That’s when I quickly dashed ot the desk and tore the picture up. Instantly I witnessed the ink being pulled right back to the page like a mage calling back a summoned animal. She was gone, in half, in fourths, in eights on my desk.

I sunk out of the chair, constricted to the floor, I was paralyzed by post fear and I never wanted to see such a terrifying figure ever again. But soon enough my mom rushes up knocking. She asks to come in and I tell her I can’t. When she asks what’s wrong I tell her I’m just reaffirming my masculinity some more.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

3: God For a Day

Riding up and down the incline, I’m staring at my sketchbook. I peeled the ‘on’ and the ‘ide’ off of the cover so all that was left was BranDiv. Unorthodox I know, but it was fun saying it over and over in my head. I’m twenty minutes late for school, but I feel unconventional today.
Reason why- getting off the incline, I’m texting my mom. We did this everyday because she’s not home much. She’s a physiatrist and didn’t get a lot of free time, but when she did, she was texting m. When I got done, I’d go to school, come home, and see her around 8. This went on every day and every day I drew something new (yesterday I drew somebody covering their ears as a plethora of numbers swarmed him because we were learning about the Greek symbol pi in math class). But aside from that, I don norhing. Come home, draw, eat and sleep. I wanted to do something unordinary.
This happens once a month for me. Last month I gorged myself until I threw up at an all you can eat restaurant. The month before that I told everybody on my bus several fake stories in a southern drawl each time as the day went by. The month before that, I wore business suits for three weeks. And this week, I didn’t know what I’d do.
But I walk into school late and pulled out my book. I began sketching and wishing the day would go faster.

Seventh period and we’re wrapping up gym and going to the locker. Upstairs is a fight club that kids in my class do because our teacher is too obese to walk up the stairs which is ironic for a phys ed. because he’s a phys ed. teacher the same way an addict tells you not to mess up like them) so kids can do whatever they want. And every day the normal kids get challenged and called pussies for declining these bulky kids from a match. They were the Greek gods of this school, looking down from Mt Olympus laughing and as I walked passed them they challenged me.
“Divide, get in this.” They referred to the next fight. I looked up from the floor, shrugged and said “Sure, why not?”Jaws dropped as I stood there- Hercules, half mortal, half god, challenging my predecessors. There I was: Brandon Divide- audacious and dashing. Bold and charismatic.
My opponent was kid from track, popular and fast as hell due to the extracurricular activity. I figured I’d draw my defeat later, like a sketch on an ancient vase. And as I made up all of these metaphors, I began to grow a god complex. The track kids name was Greg and I wondered if the cross he did on the side added endurance. I would find out soon because someone called out ‘fight’.
I threw my glasses off my face and prepared to start swinging. Greg charged, flailing fists hitting me as the crowd cringed and moaned with each connection. But I could take this-I’ve practiced with cousins, but they didn’t know this. Me and my cousins were about the same age and we fought no rules-weapons were allowed so we could grow from each other. So when I grabbed him by the throat like a horror movie, he was stunned.
A shot to that priceless face of his and I let go of his throat and started kicking him. After about six seconds of hacking his legs, he took me and pinned me to the lockers. He opened the one next to me and used it to bash me in the face. As soon as I felt it I saw red and I could admit-it hurt like a bitch. I leaned against a wall next to the lockers trying to recover from the pain. As I did this, Greg set a stool up in the middle of the room. He was going to jump off and kick me into the wall.
But as soon as he charged, I charged too and at the last second, I picked the stool up, holding it right above Greg’s knees. He awkwardly charged into the stool, making a clanking sound and falling onto it, breaking one of its legs. He screamed obscenities as he hit the floor and I stayed in fighting stance in case he wasn’t done.
A bit breathless, he rose grabbing his ribs and said “Shit Divide, you could’ve killed me.” But he stuck his hand out and we shook. As I went to pick my glasses back up, I had a pounding headache, but it was weirdly alleviated by the explosion of cheering from the locker-room. And like Ares, the god of war. I stood in pride, my followers praising me. But don’t get me wrong, I never get too hung up on ego, so I just made my exit.
Looking in the mirror, I realized I had a huge line on my face from the locker and that I had a couple of bruises, but aside from that, I was fine. After gym we were allowed to walk out of school, so I got up and left. So as soon as I walk outside, I make a left and hear from behind me: “Whoa Divide, what happened.”
I turned and saw Autumn and she looked concerned. “Me?” I said stupidly as if there was another kid referred to as ‘Divide’. “I got into a fight” I told her and her eyes got bigger. “Are you okay? Who was it?” I shook my head and said “No, its okay, we were messing around.
From her mouth, a sigh of relief. “Oh ok, sorry to sound like your mom. I just hate when kids get picked on, you know?
I nodded, holing my sketchbook under my arm, she looked. “Bran…Div?” She asked changing the subject.
“Yeah,” I half smiled awkwardly. “I just tore some letters off and…”
“I like it.” She interrupted me in a good way. “I’m going opt call you that from now on, okay, BranDiv?” I just nodded and smiled. She had a nickname for me.
“Well you stay safe okay?” she finished and again I nodded my head, but this time we both walked away from each other and I smiled. Maybe she wasn’t as scary as I had thought.

Riding the incline again and I’m relaxed because my day wasn’t the same as it was every day. I was laid back, with my eyes closed, enjoying the steady inching down the inching down the large mountain.
Then as I was about to ride it down for the fifth time, I saw a kid with a suit on and a very conservative, almost bowl cut haircut. “Hello,” he said holding out his hand. “My name is Miles.” I shook his hand “What’s your name?” he asked. “I’m Brandon.” I told him and then he asked to see my sketchpad. I showed him and he flipped through each page slowly examining each one thoroughly. Then finally when the doors opened, he went to hand over the book. “thank you Brandon, here you g-“ and he dashed out. Quickly I went after him.
Here I was-Hermes, god of speed, messenger bag in tow, hitting everything in my way with it, trying to chase this kid down for justice. Miles ran out, looking left to right and chose right, towards the Southside. He ran down East Carson Street, me chasing him until the end of it and he panicked. There was traffic so he couldn’t cross the road, but if I caught up to him, I’d pull the Ares card again like I did to Greg.
And like that, he dropped my stuff and ran. I would’ve chased him down, but I had to pick up my stuff, and besides, he looked too soft to fight anyway. But behind him, he dropped a bottle of ink. I picked it up and put it in my pocket, grabbed my sketchbook, and started to head home.
But riding on the incline back to Mount Washington, I realized Miles didn’t ruin my day because today I was a god. Sitting back, relaxing again, I felt like Zeus, resting on top of Mt Olympus, cutting the world I was responsible for out if only for just a few seconds.

Chapter 2:Dear Old Dad

Christmas Eve and my dad come rushing in, talking to my mom, He was about just as excited as I was.
That night he had a big, gray winter jacket, dark blue jeans, big, black boots, and a stupid hat that made me smile, on. His green eyes were glowing and he had a bristly black beard. I remember a lot about that night.
I was seven years old at the time, playing with my few toys right before they became outdated. My dad was whispering to my mom and all she kept saying was “Im not sure Luke, he might be too young.” But he insisted hat I’d love it. He got on his knees, eye level for me and spoke to me.
“Son”, he started, “what I’m about to give you is for big boys, but I think you’re ready for it.” I smiled. “What im about to give you is a portal to a completely different world, a world where anything from your mind can be created. But the first thing you need to enter is this.”
He handed me a pencil, but I had used those in school. So I thought that it had some kind of magic that made it different. So I had started waving the pencil like a wand, waiting for the magic to happen. “Daddy, something’s wrong”, I whined. “No son, you’re just missing something.” He kept me going. He went behind the couch and pulled it out- a huge leather-bound sketchpad which had my names letters square by square with stickers.
Dear old Dad- you were always so specific.
But I had no idea what was inside, I just knew my name was on it, so my favce lit up, I opened it and found… nothing.
No words no pictures, no portals j.
“son this is a sketchbook.” He started but I zoned out. Being a 7 year old who didn’t understand what a metaphor was, surely I was pissed. “Daddy, you lied to me!” I interrupted. “There’s no magic, there’s othing. Daddy, you’re a liar and I hate you!”
I threw his pencil to the floor and marched away. My dad just picked up the pencil, and let his head drop, eyes starting to tear up. My mom sent me to my room and went to help my dad.
Dear old Dad, I didn’t mean any of that, I’m sorry.
My mom came in and told me I hurt Daddy’s feelings and he spent a lot on that present for me. I still remember how his face sunk and his eyes dilated when I yelled at him. But nonetheless I came out and said “I’m sorry and that I didn’t hate him then I kissed him on the forehead like he did whenever I cried,. H e half smiled through the sadness and said, “Its okay son, you’re just to little for it.”
And after that we slept and had Christmas. I got showered with presents that year, but don’t remember anything other than that sketchpad. I took it for granted, but now worshipped it.
I still remember the details, down to my dads fuzzy, blue slippers to his robe to that night when we all went to sleep. A good Christmas, I smiled and slept in between my mom an dad, but when I woke up, my dad wasn’t breathing.
Dear old Dad, your heart was too big for this world.
I never asked my mom why his heard stopped because I figured I didn’t need to know. But what I did do was pick up that sketchpad and started drawing. And last year on Christmas Eve, I remembered you dad, and drew you with oil pastels. I gave the picture a glassy finish with clear acrylic spray-paints and I keep it in my sketchpad. I’ve never been so grateful for something and I just wanted to say thanks.
Dear old Dad, I’m missing you to death.

Chapter 1: Girls and Gifts (A Short Intro)

Opening my eyes, I looked down to see that I had fallen asleep in the bathtub again.
I looked down at my fingers and realized that they were incredibly wrinkly and somewhat resembled that Starry Night picture by Van Gough. It was 7:10 a.m and I had to be at the bus stop by 7:50, so I got out of the tub and got ready. In the mirror, my hair was wet and flat, but I managed to dry it and put my bangs right above my eyebrows. I put on my glasses, black with thick frames, green cargo pants, and a black punisher shit on.
This was me, every single day, getting ready for school. I don’t know why I spent so much time on appearance, but I did. Yet every day, I came out looking the same. And every day I walked into school and every day my messenger bag got abused (ol’ faithful smacked into a doorway today).
And then I sit in the classroom (ten minutes early) and I draw. But today, I realized there was something I forgot to do, A deeply rooted trait from the past. I forgot how to be simple
Reflecting back to first grade, I thought of the sentence structure and how every little kid talked-short but gratifying. For example, for an interview assignment I had when I was little, I wrote about myself and it just read:
“Hi my name is Brandon Divide. I like Cats and live with my mom and dad.”
And like that I was done. No extravagant details or droning sentences of why, just the facts. Your teacher would tell you that the sentence isn’t enough about the subject, but I think that’s all you need. My theory is all you have to state is your name, things you like, and your situation.
So hi, my name is Brandon Lee Divide and for no reason, I hate my last name and my mom, but my dad died(I’ll explain later) and I stopped liking cats due to a terrible scratch given to me by a minks. And I’m sixteen now.
And about what I like, it’s a who and her names Autumn.
Autumn Ashley Roswell is in my class. She is deathly pale and has a hobby for reading, writing love notes in the form of poetry, chewing her fingernails, and humming like an angel when she thought nobody paid attention.
But I seemed to get her every time. Autumn was a dark eye shadow kind of girls so it was no wonder why we didn’t talk. I was a bit of a geek and spent all my time sketching various things. It seemed with my always active imagination, I didn’t have time to be social. Nonetheless sometimes I wish I could be, but it’s only a dream that I never could reach.
But that was too complex; I’m shooting for simplicity here.
Class is starting and thank god its art. I pulled out my messenger bag . It was a gift from my father while he was still alive.
Inside of the sketch pad, one picture remained my favorite- him smiling, using ol pastels as my median; it was the best piece I’ve ever made.

Prologue

In Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, at the top of the Mount Washington is the overlook. At this area, you can see all of Downtown on top of several standing circular platforms surrounded by railings. Next to it is the incline- a street car looking vehicle which runs on tracks down the mountain into stations square. You can also see a statue of when George Washington met . It’s all quite beautiful, but when you pan in, there’s me, standing on the overlook with a leather suitcase. I stared at Downtown, at the beautiful skyscrapers that still have marks from the Great St. Patrick’s Flood of 1936.
But this was business, I couldn’t get distracted. So I opened up my suitcase and examined all of the things inside. After about eight seconds, I extracted the content, all my work, and threw began tossing them over the railing, onto the mountain below me. What didn’t land immediately danced and fluttered and spiraled through the air
Some people got married up here, some received their first kiss here, tourists take their kids here, me, I watched my dreams violently lashing in the air.
There was a street below the mountains, but the cars would blow it away. Nonetheless, something felt wrong, watching it twirl, I was waiting for something to happen. I waited for it to form a dragon with gnashing teeth larger than life that would eat me alive. Pr o was waiting for a gun to blow me away. Or maybe a large hand would pull me down with it. I was waiting for anything to come from this. But nothing seemed to happen as I walked away.
And like that I was terrified, paranoid of the consequences from my imagination. Once my constant escape, my beautiful muse, I feared my mind, I feared thinking. And most of all, I never wanted to draw again.

Living Lines
(A page from the sketchbook of Brandon Divide)

My Latest Project

Is this book called Living Lines

Is kind of about a kid like me but not exactly

It's more of a fantasy type thing than anything though

But you'll find that out

Anyhow I'm not good at intros so you could look at the prologue and I'll periodically post new chapters

I'm at five so far typing wise, eight or nine chapters actually written

But here it is


Kayla made up the title!