Spectacular Part-1

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Spectacular
Part One

by:
Enemyoffun


Chase just wanted to spend the last days of summer trying to make the swim team. Fate and the universe had other plans.

Male Chase.jpg

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Author's Note: Ok so I wasn't planning on posting this one this early, partially because I only have one full chapter written. Lately though, I've been questioning the quality of my writing. Not just as a writer but in general. I really want to know if a story is worth writing before I really get into it or if I should just abandon it and go back to something else. That's what is happening to me a lot lately. I start something, run out of steam halfway through and CAN'T finish it :(. I'm really going to try with this one. The goal here is a short and fun summer tale, maybe 10 chapters or so. I have a pretty good idea what I want to do with it and there's room for more later down the road. This story came about from an idea I had on a walk. Chase is a normal, average teenager with an average life who ends up getting thrust into an extraordinary situation with strange, new and alien things. It might take a bit of any TG element to show up so bear with it for a bit :)

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1.

There was something about the water. It was so serene and peaceful, so relaxing. I felt at home here. Stroke after stroke, gliding from one lap to the next. Not a care in the world. In the water, it felt like all my problems just went away. No teachers, no angry father, no disappointments. It was just me and it. A world of my own. A place where I could be myself, think what I wanted to think, do what I wanted to do. No rules, no responsibilities, not a care in the world.

My place.

I broke the surface for a breath and just long enough to tap the wall before quickly turning and going back. This was sadly only my fifth lap. I was already starting to feel it too, the fatigue. I knew my limit but today I was going to fight through it. I'd been working up to it and trying my hardest to prove I was capable of much more. Sadly I knew my body wasn't. Not without trying though.

That's when I felt it. I was halfway to the other side when I knew I couldn't push it anymore. I inwardly cursed.

“Awesome, Chase, you’re doing great!”

I heard the shout as I stopped, treading water with a pant. Looking around, I spotted my friend Charlie off to the side, waving his stopwatch over his head. He looked so happy and excited. That was Charlie, he the enthusiastic one, always happy, always smiling. I think he was born with one. He was one of those optimistic, “You can do it” kind of guys. In all the years I’ve known him, I don’t think I’d ever seen him upset or angry. We were strangely opposites in that respect. Not that I was an angry person but I’d had my fair share of things to be upset at over the years. Regardless of how upset I got though, he was always there to cheer me up.

Leaving my current lane, I swam over to where my friend was now standing. Charlie reached out to take my hand but hung on the side instead, treading water still.

"I was close," I said, disappointed.

"It was a lot better though," said my friend with an encouraging pat on my shoulder.

"Not good enough though."

It was never going to be sadly.

Charlie bent down, still smiling. Even when I was feeling bad, he was still smiling. Nothing could deter this kid. Here I was upset for not doing my best and he was still smiling. Like I said, complete opposites.

The opposites didn’t end there though.

I was tall and thin, barely enough muscle to keep me moving from one end of the pool to the other. I tried though. It was a sad attempt on my part. I was getting better though. I just wasn't happy with how things were going. Not Charlie though. He was short and stout, like a dwarf from one of those fantasy movies but not quite as tiny. He had that typical Irish/Italian heritage which was pretty common for this area. Whereas I was pushing five ten, Charlie was barely five five. Though he liked to boast he was taller, just so he didn’t feel so short and inferior. That was Charlie too. It was funny really. People always wondered how the two of us could be friends. Walking side by side we looked like the number ten. Yes, there were jokes.

I’d known Charlie most of my life though. We’d been friends since well before I could even remember. Our mothers were friends. They used to go to birthing classes together. It was almost as if we were made to be friends. It was the one constant in the whole world to me. Ok, so maybe the second constant.

The first had to be swimming.

My mother used to say, “I was born to be in the water”. I almost was. Mom went into labor while in the pool. Thankfully Dad managed to get her to the hospital on time for the delivery. She joked about it with me all the time. Well used to joke about it with me. Thinking about her put one of those lumps in my throat. It also made me only want to swim faster. Swimming had been Mom’s thing. She was a World Champion once, nearly Olympic quality. The only thing that stopped her was family. She used to tell me she had no regrets but that didn’t stop me from feeling bad about it.

Mom still liked to swim though.

She got me into it too.

I was in the pool as soon as I could walk. From that moment onward, whenever I got the chance, I was in the water. I would never be a world class swimmer, I knew that. I didn't have the power. Nor the muscle for it. There was also my heart to take into account. I was born with a murmur. It was better now but I'd been pretty sick when I was a child. It kept me from doing a lot of things. The swimming helped though. It just sadly wasn't enough to make me able to compete with others.

That didn’t stop me from trying though.

Its why I was here.

Every day.

Summer was slowly winding down. The new swim season started next month in September. This year I was bound and determined to prove to everyone I was ready for it. I’d been practicing all summer long, a couple days a week. It would have been more but Dad worked most days and I had to stay home to watch my sister, Carrie. She was ten and though she thought she was old enough to stay home by herself for a few hours a day, Dad wouldn’t allow it. So my practice time was when I could manage it.

I was just happy to get any time at all swimming.

I felt at home in the water.

I was still treading water when the door to the pool made a loud banging sound. It echoed off the walls. Turning, I groaned. I must have lost track of time because we were usually out of here before the swim team arrived. They practiced all summer. I usually scheduled my swimming around their time, hoping to avoid them.

Well one of them in particular.

“Hey, it's Ariel, the Little Non-Mermaid!”

Kurt Donner and I have NEVER been friends.

He was a year older than me and never let me forget it. Kurt knew my problems, everyone did. I'd been trying out for the swim teams for as long as I could remember but I never made the cut. I was either too scrawny, too small or not fast enough. Kurt never let me forget it either. He used to like to push me around, harass the hell out of me growing up. He was bigger than me now too, taller with the typical V-shaped upper body that all swimmers craved. It sucked that he was an awesome swimmer too. He was going places. I heard college scouts were already looking at him. There was even talk about the Olympics in a few years. Kurt was a Phelps in training. He shouldn’t have had time for our schoolyard rivalry.

But he was an ass.

That’s how the name “Ariel” came about. It was a dig at my hair. Most of the boys on the team shaved their heads, it was less drag in the water. Me, I had this thing about my hair. Well, actually my mother did. She used to like it when I let it grow long because when it did it was silky smooth and she loved to brush it. I stopped letting it grow ridiculously long in middle school. That didn't stop the name calling though. My hair was reddish brown and it the water---with it streaming behind my back as I swam---I looked a lot like the Disney princess.

Kurt was the only one who still used it though.

To me, it wasn’t a name of endearment either.

Grunting, I pulled myself out of the water. The team was on the other side of the pool, near the entrance to the locker room. I ignored them for the moment. Charlie handed me the towel he was holding, a sour look on his face.

Charlie turned to glare at Kurt. “We could have done without him today.”

Like me, Charlie didn’t have the greatest history with Kurt either. Unlike me though, Kurt was downright nasty to my friend. Being bigger and stronger meant he could push people around. At least in Kurt’s eyes anyway. Charlie was one of his chief targets. Charlie was the kind of kid who took it too. He never fought back, never reported it. He just let Kurt and others like him continue to terrorize him. I tried to help whenever I could but unfortunately, I wasn’t always there to have my friend’s back. That was the problem with the world today, nine out of ten times bully’s got away with it. I know the school had a Zero tolerance policy toward them but only as long as they were caught or reported.

Kurt was slick.

Charlie was still glaring at Kurt. The older teen finally took notice.

“What are you staring at, Tubs!”

“Donner, zip it!” snapped a voice.

Kurt looked surprised, as Coach Grant came wandering out of the locker room. It was nice to know there were some adults out there who cared. Or who noticed. Charlie looked surprised too, probably not expecting the Coach to say anything. That’s not the kind of man Coach Grant was though. Name calling, harassment and especially goofing around. Those things didn’t belong here. He didn’t mind the typical locker room name calling but he knew most of that was in good fun. He also knew the kind of ass that Kurt was. Kurt tried to bust everyone’s balls because he thought he was the best. He was good but there were others who were just as good if not better. I wanted to say something more---maybe even thank the man for caring---but instead I sent Charlie a reassuring smile.

I finished toweling off, giving Kurt a glare of my own.

I didn’t expect a response.

Instead, Kurt and the team started filing toward the benches along the side, getting ready. I watched them with interest. That should have been me. Coach thought so too. Last year, before my first year in high school, I tried out at the end of eighth grade. The Coach told me I had a lot of heart, I just didn’t have enough of it. Well more specifically, I didn’t have the power to keep up with the other guys my age.
The other guys could do way more and keep it going.

I was a liability they couldn’t afford.

I watched the team doing warm-ups as I meandered my way toward the locker rooms. I was nearly toward the door when Coach Grant walked alongside me.

“Looking good out there.”

“Still not good enough though.”

He sighed. “You know I would let you on the team if I could.”

I nodded.

In most circumstances, the Coach would have tried working with me. There were ways to make me improve. I could pack on the pounds then work it into muscle with a steady exercise regiment. The school wouldn't allow it. Well, actually Principal McKenna. I was too much of an insurance liability. They were afraid something might happen to me and were scared they’d get sued. I could still use the school pool to swim laps if I wanted but I wasn’t allowed to compete in any sports or use the weight room.

It was bogus.

It also killed my dreams of a swimming career before it even started.

“You know my offer still stands,” he said, following me into the locker room.

“No offense sir but I don’t want to be the equipment manager.”

The damn Towel boy.

It was a disgrace.

It would also just give Kurt more ammunition.

“Keep working at it, we’ll figure something out.”

He left me there.

I wandered over to my locker, put in the combination and started to dress. I thought about hitting the showers but I didn’t really have the time. It was Saturday. I just had enough time to catch the bus and make it across town to pick Carrie up from Ballet class. If I shower now, I’d miss it. So instead, I pulled my damp hair back in a tiny ponytail and covered it with my hood. I was still a bit wet as I put on my shoes but I’d been a bit distracted out there. Not just with the Coach and Kurt.

It was Mom.

More specifically the accident…

A knocking on the door drew my attention.

“I’m decent” I shouted.

A moment later, the door opened and Charlie came wandering in.

“You disappeared. I looked away one second and the next you were gone.”

I smirked. “I was avoiding The Kurt.”

Its what we called him. Kurt had a tendency to refer to himself in the third person. “Kurt loves that” or “Kurt is horny.” That kind of stupid thing. So Charlie and I started calling him The Kurt as if his ego defined who he was. It was our own shared joke. The funny thing is, another fellow “bottom feeders” overheard us and started spreading the name, secretly half the school called him that now. Until a couple of months ago, when Kurt himself found out. Instead of being offended, the moron wasn’t in on the joke. He started calling himself that too and even spread the rumor he was the one that came up with the name.

It only made things funnier.

Thinking about it made me smile.

It was nice to smile again.

Charlie gave me a look. “You ok?”

“I’m good.”

“You don’t look good.”

“Just thinking”.

“Oh,” he said then softly. “About you...”

“No” I snapped, interrupting him then apologizing.

It wasn’t Charlie’s fault. It wasn’t mine either. It was just one of those things.

“Hey,” said Charlie, trying to change the subject. “You want to head to my house after this, Jay got an advanced copy of the new...”

“Have to get Carrie.”

“Again?”

I sighed. “Dad’s working.”

Its all my father seemed to do lately. He’d always been a bit of a workaholic but after the accident, it's all he did any more. We barely saw him. Everyone deals with tragedy in their own way I suppose and my father it would seem liked to avoid it. I avoided it too but in a different way. Carrie had no problem talking about Mom. Sure she cried just as much as I did but she wasn’t scared to say her name. I couldn’t. Even thinking about her made it hurt. Which of course made me think about her even more. When it happened over a year ago, the school counselor Mrs. Rice wanted me to go see a therapist. Dad wouldn’t allow it though. So I was stuck wallowing in my own little pity party.

It wasn’t fun.

“Maybe you can come over later then?”

I shrugged. “I’ll see what happens.”

“I love your family, Chase,” he said, rubbing the back of his head. “And no offense but your dad can be a real dick sometimes.”

I didn’t argue with him.

Instead, I cursed but not because of what he said. He was right. I cursed because I saw the clock on the wall behind him. Carrie’s class was about to get out and I still needed to get to the bus.

Damn it!

******

Greenfield wasn’t a large city but it wasn’t small by any means either. It had on average about twenty thousand people. When you look at that number and the city proper, it was hard to see where they all were. The city itself was not that much to look at, the tallest building was only about eight stories and the only main attraction to draw in the tourists was the large canal that ran smack through the middle of it. We had all the typical things most cities would have: churches, schools, a police and fire station. Except there were no big things. No multi-screen cineplexes or chain stores. Greenfield was a simple place with simple people.

It was also a city of people late to picking up their sisters.

I cursed as I just barely made the bus.

The driver gave me a nasty look as if I was cursing at her.

I rushed to the back of the bus to find a seat, ignoring the driver’s glare. I dropped down next to an older woman, apologizing for bumping her handbag before whipping out my phone. I checked my messages and wasn’t the least bit surprised to find one from my sister. She was wondering where I was. I sighed as I typed a furious reply:

OMW.

She replied a few seconds later with an Annoyed emoji.

I groaned.

Mom would have too.

She always used to hate when Carrie relied on those little things instead of typing. She wasn’t too thrilled with my sister having a phone at all but she knew she couldn’t deny her one. Everyone had their own phone these days. Carrie’s was supposed to be for emergencies only but being a young girl she was probably never off the thing.

USE YOUR WORDS, I typed.

It was a phrase our mother was fond of.

FINE. YOU OWE ME ICE CREAM.

Of course, I did.

That was Carrie. She always made you pay for something you did wrong. She learned that from Dad. When my parents got married twenty years ago, Dad was a young patrolman straight out of the Academy. Mom was just finishing up her teaching degree. The way my mother used to tell it, Dad didn’t even want to date her. They met at a party and he seemed disinterested, almost career driven. Mom softened him up though, wore him down. They were married a year later. A year after that, they had my older sister Becca. She was a freshman in college now. I came two years after that. I’m not saying Carrie was an accident but she wasn’t planned either. My mother loved us all each and in her own way. Dad on the other hand…

My father wasn’t a cold man by nature.

It's just that if Mom was the loving parent then he had to be the hard one. The Disciplinarian. Dad’s form of discipline was where Carrie got her edge from. “You do something wrong, you make up for it.” Carrie was still pretty young to truly understand what Dad tried to instill in us but she got the principle of it. Dad just used a different kind of wording: “You made a mistake, now fix it.” He wouldn’t have been happy with Carrie extorting me for ice cream but he would have been angrier if he knew I was late picking her up. So the ice cream---in his opinion---would have been payment for my screw up.

He carried that with him to work too.

It helped him become the youngest Chief of Police in the state. Dad was ambitious like that too. It made him put the job first. A part of me hated him for it. Especially after losing Mom. Instead of dealing with the problem, he ignored it with more work. His stubbornness almost sidelined Becca’s college dreams. She was ready to drop out and help raise Carrie but thankfully our Aunt Grace---Dad’s younger sister---stepped in. Ten years younger and single, Grace had the time to help. Unfortunately, that help only came on the weekends. Even with her around though, I still picked up a lot of slack. Like with Carrie. Aunt Grace was awesome but when it came to my sister, the woman just didn’t know what to do.

Like I said, she was a lot like Dad.

ICE CREAM, NO PROBLEM.

A smiley face followed.

I sighed, defeated.

I shut off my phone, stuffing it into my gym bag. It was a loaner from Becca’s track days. Whereas I was the sickly, frail one, my sister was the star athlete. She could have gone to school on a athletics scholarship but she chose a scholastic one instead. She wanted to be a lawyer. Another influence of my father’s. He couldn’t be prouder of her. I didn’t envy my sister but sometimes I wished she didn’t try so hard. It made the rest of us look bad. By the rest of us, I meant me of course. I won’t lie. I wasn’t the son my father was hoping for. My heart condition kept me off most sports teams, it also squashed my father’s dreams of me following him into the police force some day.

He would never openly admit to being disappointed in me but I could see it in his face. Every time he looked at me, he always frowned.

It was painful.

I distracted myself from thinking about him by looking out the window. Sadly there wasn’t much to see. There wasn’t anything impressive to look at in Greenfield. The streets were lined with little shops and brick buildings, broken up by the occasional city tree plot, flower bed, and bench. There was a bustle of people but not nearly as many as one might see in the Fall. Greenfield was not a summer town. Most of the people migrated to the far south for the beaches or to one of the many amusement parks in neighboring cities. The rest either stayed indoors where the AC was constantly blowing.

That made me frown a bit more.

Lazy people bothered me.

I think it had something to do with being cooped up in the house a good portion of my young life. Well until I was ready to go to school anyway. With my heart murmur and a very nervous mother, I spent a lot of time in my room in bed or playing video games. Things changed when the murmur cleared up on its own but it still didn’t stop my mother from being overprotective. Swimming was the one and only constant in my life. It helped me stay active. That’s why it bothered me so much to hear a lot of my friends talking about playing this game or that when they could be outside, walking or running.

Doing something active. Something besides shooting imaginary zombies or bragging about their multiplayer kill death ratio score. Things I didn’t really and never would truly understand. Losing oneself in a game or on your damn phone all the time, it was counterproductive.

I looked away from the window for a moment and scoffed at what I saw. There was a girl my age across the aisle playing a game on her phone. She was the perfect example.

My scoff must have been louder than I thought though because she turned and locked eyes with me. I tried turning away but her eyes were mesmerizing. I think they were green but they looked almost gold too. It had to be a trick of the light or contacts or something. It was strange though because, with her hood up, her eyes were the only thing I really noticed.

The bus came to a stop an instant later but she was standing ever before it did. Weird. She stuffed her phone into a carrier bag and started down the aisle before anyone else. I watched her go, transfixed for a moment more. Others started to file off behind her.

The bus driver shouted at me, “Kid, this your stop!”

I blinked and jumped to my feet a second later.

I thanked her before running out the door.

The bus stop was a couple block from Madam Gertrude’s Studio of Fine Elegance. No, I’m not being an ass, that’s actually what the place is called. Rushing down the sidewalk, I barely noticed that mystery girl was standing in front of me. I nearly bowled over the top of her because she was stopped dead in the middle of my running path. We fell together in a tumble, me on top of her.

Bumping into her had knocked off her hood and I finally got a better look at her. She couldn’t have been much older than me. She had short dark hair, shaved on the sides and streaked red. She had a single ring in her nose, and several in each earlobe. It helped sell the punk look she was trying to embrace. Like her dark makeup, which only helped to enhance those strange “gold” eyes of hers more.

"Are you ok?' I grunted, pushing myself off of her.

"Watch where you're going!"

"Me?" I said, annoyed. "You're the one who was standing in the middle of the sidewalk, staring into space!"

This time she grunted. She snapped to her feet quickly. Scary fast in fact. As soon as she did, she turned to glare at me. I quickly pulled myself up, embarrassed. As soon as I did, I was surprised that she was actually taller than me. It was rare to find a girl taller than me. She was at least two inches taller, which meant...wow.

There weren’t too many six foot girls around here.

Maybe that’s why I was so drawn to her before.

It wasn’t just her height though.

She was ripped. Her hoodie was sleeveless and I could see her arms. They were well muscled. It kind of surprised me more. This girl was clearly some kind of serious athlete. Judging by her height and those arms, I’d say Volleyball player easily. It was strange though because I’d never seen her before. Greenfield wasn’t exactly a bustling tourist town so for her to be from another city, it was pretty rare. I suppose she could be here to see the canal but why get off a bus here? I looked around. Wasn't the canal in the other direction too?

“You are tall enough,” she said, after sizing me up. “Perhaps you could take me in a fight.”

Fight, what?

“I don’t want to fight you!”

She smirked. “Smart boy, you’d lose.”

What the hell?

I was about to say something else but my phone buzzed.

I cursed.

Pulling it out of my bag, I checked my message:

WHERE R U?

Crap.

I looked at the time. Carrie’s class got out ten minutes ago.

Damn.

Dad was going to be pissed already.

I looked at Giant girl, shaking my head. “Have fun with whatever?” I said, stepping around her.

If she said anything, I was already too far away to hear.

It was all weird. I finally meet a girl that was semi-interesting and the first thing she wanted to do was kick my ass. Must be my lucky day. I rushed away, typing a quick apology as I did. She replied with a couple more disapproving emojis and more demands. I sighed. I would probably end up catering to them all or face the wrath of both her and Dad. Dad I could deal with, Carrie scared the hell out of me.

Author’s note: As I’m sure all of you know, comments are life blood to an author. I’m not begging or demanding, but I certainly would appreciate anything you have to say (or ask). It doesn’t have to be long and involved, just give me your reaction to the story. Thanks in advance...EOF

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Comments

Thanks :)

Enemyoffun's picture

Slowly more is coming :D.

Looks Like Things Might Get Pretty...

jengrl's picture

interesting . I have a feeling that Tall Girl is about to show up more often and have a profound effect on his life . I look forward to reading more of this story ! Great job with it so far !

PICT0013_1_0.jpg

Looks like things might get pretty interesting...

I have to agree. I also get the feeling that Chase and Tall Girl will be running into each other a lot, which could add to the fun.

Like the others, I would definitely want to see more chapters of this story.

Chase and Tall Girl

Enemyoffun's picture

Its funny because she was a last minute addition. The chapter felt like it was lacking something so I put her in to flesh it out and I think I like it. I have some ideas for her :).

Tall Girl?

Enemyoffun's picture

She has a name...its... *Nope, Spoilers* :P

Her name is Astrid

Star to the friends not beaten up.

Please keep writing for those of us that can't.

Way Good

Don't you even think about not continuing this. Love the characters a lot

Hugs
Fran Cesca

- Formerly Turnabout Girl

More

Enemyoffun's picture

Well I'm finishing up Ch.2 now. I hope to go right into 3 as soon as I'm done.

So this

Athena N's picture

... is you writing something you're not sure is good enough? Wow. I'm jealous.

Please finish it, and keep writing.

This Story :(

Enemyoffun's picture

Its not so much that I don't think its good enough, its more like "good enough in my mind's eye to finish". I tend to start a lot and NEVER finish them :(.

Good enough to finish

They've ALL been good enough to finish. Please revisit your past serials and finish some which have been left unfinished. After you finish this one, of course.

Notes

Enemyoffun's picture

I have Notes to help me finish the Unfinished ones. I've tried to go back to them but... :(.

More

Enemyoffun's picture

Good news, I just finished Ch.2 :D.

Many __ spaces and ? left open...

I like the story and am eager to find out where it is going

Jessie C

Jessica E. Connors

Jessica Connors

This Story

Enemyoffun's picture

I have a pretty good idea where its going. I'm not sure if I'll lose readers or not because of it but sadly you can't please everyone. I do hope you stick around for the rest though :).

Great setup

Loved the start of this story. All the elements are there for a really enjoyable ride. Looking forward to the trip whether we reach the destination or not. There is nothing wrong with your writing skill. Don’t let the English class dictators make you doubt your skill. Looking forward to the next 9 promised chapters.

The Dictators

Enemyoffun's picture

The Dictators ALWAYS make me doubt my skill. Especially in Creative Writing classes. Everyone always seemed better than me :(. It doesn't help that Grammarly told me that my writing was on par for a 5th grade level. That one really stung.

Screw Grammarly!

I love your stories! And I'm honestly always excited when a new one comes out. You are possibly my favorite author here actually, or at least definitely in the top 3. Which I think should mean something considering the number of frankly great stories and authors on this site, along with the fact that I'm really terrible about picking favorite things. I mean, I don't even have favorite movies =p.

I doubt my writing fares any better than yours honestly, in terms of writing level. I mean, I had to just look up whether I was spelling "fares" correctly (hint, I was originally spelling it as "fairs" until google told me I was very wrong, and the random reddit page told me to that this is what dictionaries are for, not reddit.) That might not mean much coming from someone who's 26 and has been continually in and out of college several times, and who frankly has never really been that great with English writing and grammar classes to begin with... I'm also a sociology major, not an English major, but umm... I swear I was going somewhere with this...

Anyways, language is a social construct. It's an ever changing tool used for communication, and in this case specifically, to tell great stories. Personally I don't care how many grammatical errors might be in your writing, or how many big and fancy words and expressions you use (a fair bit of which would probably go over my head anyways cause I can't be bothered to look stuff up while I'm in the middle of reading.) Yes having okay enough grammar and the ability to make the story flow well enough has it's importance. But in the end what I'm really interested in is a good story, not a thesis paper on grammar or some aspect of creative writing.

tldr: You're awesome, your writing is awesome, the English language is sucks, and I just wanna write long rants attempting to validate your existence and work and tell you how much I enjoy your stories. Looking forward to what comes next, as well as hopefully future updates to some of your other (also awesome) stories!

-The One True FlitterPuff

Off to a good start

BobbieCD56's picture

So far I like the set up and the pace.
Looks like an interesting group of characters.
Looking forward to the rest of the story,
literally (apologies to Paul Harvey, LOL).

Characters

Enemyoffun's picture

I have a few more planned but I think a good majority of them are for later down the road. I wanted to make this story as self contained as possible so those other characters might not even appear.

You Asked For a Comment

Are we supposed to believe a town of 20,000 has enough buses that you are either just on time or 10 minutes late depending on which one you catch?

Buses

Enemyoffun's picture

Buses are a really fickle thing. I've been late for them numerous times but I always seem to catch them. My big thing with them is that they have a tendency to leave early. That or they don't actually stop at the stop when they're supposed too.

Also my city has 20,000 people and we don't really have any buses here that actually drive around the city. They go through the city but generally to take us out of it, toward places like Buffalo and Niagara Falls. There are a few scheduled stops along the way but if its not a stop, they won't let you off. Its really annoying.

Spectacular

I've read your work before and never had a problem with your quality it has always been top notch. This story is off to a great start "tall girl looks like a great character who has what he lacks in strength and attitude and appears like she could teach him alot, if thats where you're going. I will just have to wait for chapter 2 and see if I can guess better than usual.

Time is the longest distance to your destination.

Ch.2

Enemyoffun's picture

Tall girl doesn't appear in Ch.2 :D.

Good beginning!

I can't wait to see where it goes.

Jorey
.

Where Its Going

Enemyoffun's picture

The course of this story might surprise some people. Its definitely not what it appears.Its no Starlight Summer or Its Just a Skirt for instance.

Continue please.

Great start, please go on.

Robyn Adaire

Continuing

Enemyoffun's picture

I finished Ch.2 today and started on Ch.3, so far things are going good *Crosses Fingers*.

Well, I for one definitely

Well, I for one definitely want to see where this story will go. I can relate to Chase and his heart murmur; as my oldest son was born with one. However his sealed up as he got older and he did do sports and the like. Being diver and swimmer in High School, I can also relate to Chase's desire to be on the swim team.

Heart Murmur

Enemyoffun's picture

My sister had one too that sealed up as she got older :).

Don't worry about the critics

You seem to have a creative story telling talent. There are helpful followers on BC that could help your editing, if asked, when needed. KEEP AT IT Give your muse free reign. Thanks

As always, a strong start

with just enough background to not drown us with exposition.

I wish more writers would take the time to set up their stories with strong beginnings like this.

Since this comes from EOF I expect solid. entertaining tales and I've seldom, if ever, been disappointed. This looks like another good one and I'll be following it.

Thanks EOF for your hard work and allowing us to go on these flights of imagination with you.

Catherine Linda Michel

As a T-woman, I do have a Y chromosome... it's just in cursive, pink script. Y_0.jpg

Interesting set up for the story

gillian1968's picture

I love swimming too.

It was the only sport I was competitive in.

Gillian Cairns

I'm surprised I missed this when it was published.

WillowD's picture

On the plus side, it means that Chapter 2 is a click away. No waiting.

I have no idea where this story will be going but I am eager to find out. And I am so glad that you are still publishing new stories here.

As always you are off to a

As always you are off to a good start. Looking forward to the next section

Keep on trucking

This is good, the characterizations and plot are rock solid in your stories. Thanks for sharing.

Good, bad, ugly?

Jamie Lee's picture

Seems like there's always a Kurt type arse in every crowd, only without the long ears or tail. At some point Kurt is going to go after Chase when he can't be seen, and tall girl might be there to administer a lesson on manners.

Running away from an emotional hurt helps no one, causes other problems, and brings out hidden matters which themselves were never dealt with.

The death of their mom, dad's wife, has to be dealt with before it tears that family completely apart. Chase's heart problem has already driven a wedge between him and his father's unreasonable expectations, which has had a profound on Chase.

Others have feelings too.

Just started reading.

It's represent people like me who dont have that super body and been bullied few time. Really want to see what will happen. Will comment as I go If that ok with you.

Please pardon my english. It's not my mother tounge.

I think I am liking this story already. Cheers.

Good start

I’m interested to see where this is going, the has to be some kind of physical affinity for water or something it seems special to Chase. Also with the heart murmur gone he should be in physically better shape even if it doesn’t seem like he hit puberty especially if he has doing aerobic excessive.

hugs :)
Michelle SidheElf Amaianna