No Matter How Far 1
This story is purely fictional. If you are not over the age of 18 or are opposed to this type of material please Do Not Read It. This story belongs to Green and reproductions without permission are not allowed.
Please let me know what you think. Email me Greenmeccatoon@Yahoo.com
In 2003 my friend Jonas began a story that he never finished. He passed away in an unfortunate car accident. He tried writing his story twice. He struggled with the story and never fully realized it.
Recently I was given the chance to see his notes on this story and I began to see his vision. A year ago I was approached by someone asking me to finish his story. I was originally opposed to it but as I read his notes I realized that this story deserves to be told.
As a tribute to My friend Jonas, I present to you his story as seen through his notes. I will be writing as Jonas the watcher. Without further ado I present to you**:**
No Matter How Far
The Watcher's Chronicle
As Written by Green as Jonas The Watcher.
Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved.
Victor Hugo, Les Miserables, 1862
What is happiness? Maybe it's an unrelenting goal we pour our souls to achieve. Maybe some of us achieve it if only for a few seconds. Maybe some of us are happy if only through the eyes of another. Maybe it's just a lie we hold in our selves. In my mind its just that ever pressing word that motivates us to do things we never thought possible.
One particular person comes to mind as I write this. Mathew Weir is someone I have been watching for a long time. He was once the star of Little River High. The first freshman to make varsity. The schools pride and joy. He had so much, he lost it all so quick.
The Watcher
Chapter One
What Do We Know,
I walk into the schools lobby, Little River High School established 1975, thirty five years of excellence. it says on a bronze plate, I see my face's reflection. I look so old now.
I've been gone for so long, nothing seems the same anymore, yet it's so familiar. Beneath the fresh paint and new lockers there is a history marked on those walls. I was a part of that history once, now I'm just a stranger.
How do I even begin to explain? I was unique. I stood above the rest and I couldn't fail. It took someone greater than me to take me down. My brother took his life. I couldn't deal with it, I found comfort in drugs.
I am a drug addict, I can say that now. Yes I am a drug addict. I've been sober for a year now, yet I still long for it. It gave me so much as it took away my life and my friends. I know I can never go back to it. I've gone so far and coming back here is my last step. I had to face what I had left behind.
I see them, my old friends, they are almost untouchable. I feel dirty in their presence. I'm not good enough to be closer. I'm not worthy of their time. Jessica still has that glow that attracts everyone to her. Ian still wears his fathers letterman jacket. They don't notice me as I walk past them.
I'm back not to regain a glory I lost long ago, but to regain a life I should have kept. I am different now, I belonged here, no I belong here. I won't let it get to me again. I had to regain their trust.
“Hey, I'm glad you came,” says Margaret, the only person I've come to count on.
“It's time, I have to face it.” She smiles.
“But you don't have to face it alone,” she says, holding my hand.
Margaret is the only real person I've met in a long time. The only one that through all of her own problems cares. Even when I'm not at my greatest, she's at my side. When I was lost she was there.
“Come on Matthew, I'll take you to home room.”
We walk by the trophy case. It's filled with statues and plaques of excellence past. Bronze, silver and gold everywhere as well as images of school spirit. I was guided by this shrine, the sole reason I lived.
“Hey come on the bell is going to ring,” says Margaret as she pulls me away from the trophy case.
*****
English class is an experience in agitation. They stare at me with wonder in their eyes. “Who is he?” someone asks. “I think he used to come here,” says another.
I am a whisper now, an old rumor once told amongst them. They are so pure to me. I see the clean white lives they live, free of the reality I once touched and I envy them. I envy their laughter, their false sense of what is real and the naivety that comes with being young.
“You are still young aren't you?” asks the watcher.
Yes, but I no longer have what they have. As far as I am concerned I have been through hell, only to realize that I am nothing if I don't regain the meaning my life once had, that nothing I've learned matters if I don't put it to use and face my past.
I see Ian Lewis, my former best friend, now I'm just a memory long forgotten. I am sitting three feet away Ian, he doesn't notice me. The last time I saw Ian was a year ago, before I overdosed.
“Dad is going to ring my ass today, I missed practice yesterday,” Ian says to another class mate.
“Well, what do you expect? You missed the homecoming practice,” the other Kid I vaguely remember replies, I think his name Is Reese.
“You should talk to him,” says Margaret.
“Not yet. I can't walk over there and say, hi Ian, remember me? We used to be friends but I stopped being your friend when I got addicted to drugs. I went through rehab and now I'm back. Then he wont ever be my friend again.”
“Why is he so important?” asks the Watcher.
He, well at one time he was somebody I secretly loved. I guess I still love him. He never knew how I felt and he won't ever know. Right now I'd be happy if he even talks to me. The only thing we had in common was football. We'd talk for hours about our games, our victories, our losses, it was enough to keep our friendship alive.
“Turn to page thirteen, read chapter one and answer the review questions on page sixteen,” says the teacher in his monotone voice.
*****
Jessica notices me during lunch, she stares for a long time before she walks over to me. “Matthew?” she asks. Her smile still hides the troubled person beneath.
“Hi Jennifer,” I reply.
“Oh my god, you're back.” She hugs me. “Where have you been,” She asks, still hugging me.
“Well, I was in,” I begin to say, but I can't tell her.
“You were where?”
“I was up north,” I lie.
“I'm so glad you're back. Does Ian know?”
“I haven't been able to talk to him,” I say, she nods. “I don't know if that's a good Idea.”
“Yeah I barely talk to him myself these days, Jessica is very jealous, you know?”I nod. “Well I'm glad to see you, keep in touch. ” she says, giving me another hug and then she walks away.
I met Jessica when we were five. She sat next to me in Kindergarten and we were friends ever since. She was the first one that knew I was gay.
“Why was she the first to know?”
Because she was the first to notice. She asked me herself and I gave her an answer, I knew I could trust her. She never made it a big deal but accepted the fact that I am gay.
I sit alone on one of the lunch tables by the windows. I watch a couple of kids throwing stuff at some kid. He looks pretty mad. They all laugh as he runs away. I always wonder why they put up with the taunting. Across the lunch room I notice Ian talking to Jennifer, they seemed happy.
I don't know many of the kids that go here. Everyone is so different since I left. So much diversity among everyone. I wonder in which category or group I'll be placed. Will I become one of the invisible kids that no one knows, or one of the preps, or better yet one of the Stoners.
*****
I have one goal and that's to regain what I once had, without involving football. I had friends and family now I have a mother that can't speak to me, my father pities me and my brother, well what more can I say.
They never found his body, my mother still thinks that he's alive. I found the note on the table that my brother left behind. I ran all the way to the bridge, getting there as he fell. He fell until I couldn't see him anymore. They searched for days, all they found was one of his shoes.
It got to me, I let myself think that his death was my fault. Drugs took those thoughts from me, giving me chemical freedom. The last time I took drugs, they found me next to a dumpster close to death.
My mother had me placed in Rehab. It took me a long time to face what I had done. I had so much, so very much. I never thought of my parents, they could have both of their sons, now I'm a stranger in their house and Jason is gone.
After rehab I found myself unable to face those that I had hurt. I couldn't face Ian or Jennifer. I had let the team down on homecoming weekend. To my parents I was now an obligation, not a son. I had my parents enroll me at a boarding school where I could be away from it all.
Margaret gave me the strength. Unconditionally she gave me her friendship and guided me through everything, guiding me back here.
“Students I would like to introduce you to a new student,” says the teacher. “This is Tony farmer.”
I look up to see him, Tony Farmer. I watch as he sits next to Ian. I can already tell this kid is going to be football material. I notice something in Ian I've never seen before, he likes this kid.
“How do you know?”
He's giving that kid the same look I used to give him. It's the subtle way he glares at him. Look he blushes as that guy says something to him. The way he keeps looking over when he thinks Tony isn't looking.
*****
I see Ian again as I exit the school. He is sitting with Jennifer his girlfriend on the hood of his car. They were talking to some other kids. I head past them, walking towards my car. I wonder if she knows?
“That's not who I think it is, is it?” I hear him say as I walk past him.