Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Influential Short Stories

I decided to create a list of short stories that have profoundly influenced me as an author.  This is not a list of the "best" or most "classic" stories out there, but simply the ones that made me into the writer I am today.  I strongly recommend them all.  Enjoy!

“Man from the South” by Roald Dahl: 
The premise: An old man offers a boy his car if he can light his lighter ten consecutive times.  The catch: he chops off his finger if he fails.
Its greatness: The twist ending (even superior to the Tarantino film storyline based on it) and the twisted old man character were in my head for weeks.

“The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allen Poe:
The premise: A man uses alcohol as bait to wreak his vengeance upon his enemy.
Its greatness: I enjoyed following the anti-hero in his quest for justice.  Revenge is a great literary tool.

“Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” by Joyce Carol Oates
The premise: A pair of unsettling men show up in a car to take a rebellious teenage girl away.
Its greatness: It's creepy enough that it feels "wrong" to enjoy this story, but Oates uses dialogue as hypnotizing (spoiler!) as the antagonist himself.  I strive to hook the reader like Oates does.

“The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber” by Ernest Hemingway
The premise: A man's manhood is questioned when he runs from a lion.
Its greatness: I enjoy the theme of "what a man is."  I enjoy Hemingway's stories, but often feel like they lack in interesting plots.  This story is one of the ones with a great plot in addition to his terse style.

“Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
The premise: Society handicaps the gifted and talented people, and Harrison is not happy about it.
Its greatness: I enjoy the political statement in this story, as well as the humor and drama.

“Games” by William Sleator
The premise: Kids play games with their younger siblings in the car.
Its greatness: I related to this story as a child.  Sleator's tone with his siblings is hilarious, and I strive to achieve something similar when I write about kids' shenanigans.

“The Ice Palace” by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The premise: A woman falls in love with a man from the north, abandoning her southern roots.
Its greatness: I'm not Fitzgerald's biggest fan, but I love the way he captures the essence of north vs. south in this story.  I enjoy stories where the setting is a character (a reason I love Pat Conroy's books).  I also consider setting to be one of my weak areas of writing.  So this story especially inspires me.  Although the protagonist feels revulsion towards a region I love, I was able to identify with her.  Fitzgerald earns points for getting me into a story that demonizes one of my favorite places.

“To Build a Fire” by Jack London
The premise: A man heads out in the Yukon in the -70 degree weather.
Its greatness: I'm not normally a "man vs. nature" type of reader, but this story had me enthralled.  The descriptions of the cold made me forget that there was only one human character in the story.  It was good enough for me to read to my middle school class and keep their attention.  That's impressive.

“A& P” by John Updike
The premise: A boy gets behind a girl who enters a store under-dressed.
Its greatness: The simplicity of the situation and characters made me want to read Updike's other writing.  There was something intriguing about Queenie, the girl in the bathing suit.

“Donkey Greedy, Donkey Gets Punched” by Steve Almond
The premise: A man gets greedy in a game of poker.
Its greatness: This was a story that was simply enjoyable.  I had a lot of fun reading about the gambling, and it made me feel like going out and playing the game myself.  Obviously an effective story.

“A Dark Brown Dog” by Stephen Crane
The premise: A boy with an alcoholic father takes in a dog.
Its greatness: This is the saddest story I have ever read.  Crane is a master of emotion.

“The Cactus” by O. Henry
The premise: A man tries to woo a girl.
Its greatness: This is my favorite O. Henry story.  There are some twist endings you can see coming, and some you don't.  This was one that came out of nowhere, and I strive to achieve the same in my short stories.

“Liar!” by Isaac Asimov
The premise: A robot gets involved in romance.
Its greatness: I never expected revelations and emotions like this in a robot story.  Definitely an underrated story in I, Robot.  I like the combination of romance and science fiction!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

The Hitchhiker by Ricker Pond



 Below is a short story I wrote during a break from the novel.  Obviously, I'm feeling a bit nostalgic about driving through rural Vermont at night.  Enjoy!

           It was Christmas season, so Scott Bieber was singing his favorite song, “Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer” with the radio.  Pressing the gas pedal of his black pickup truck, he grinned at the furious roaring of his engine.  Then he jerked his wheel and left black marks on the road as he turned onto Vermont Route 232, the road that would lead him to his buddy Jay’s house.
            Scott, a thirty-one year old bachelor, ignored the white hats the sky had deposited on the evergreen trees several hours earlier.  He had two vital missions tonight: to prove to Jay that his truck could make it over a thicker pile of snow than Jay’s “Deer Killer” truck, and to out-drink his buddy. 
            Scott had a day old beard and a Patriots hat covering his messy brown hair that curled out from under like lifeless fingers.  On this starless night, it was difficult to tell the wrinkle lines on Scott’s face from several scars that lined his cheeks.  In the past decade, Scott had experienced no less than fourteen accidents involving power tools, motorized vehicles, and fire.
            Two minutes up Route 232, Scott spotted a man in a black jacket and red scarf and face mask waving frantically.  Scott glanced at his truck’s thermometer: it was a skin tingling -23 degrees outside.  Driving past the pedestrian without slowing, he waved slightly.  “I’ve got places to go, beer to drink!” he sang out.
            Route 232 ran parallel to a narrow river that fed into the large Ricker Pond further up.  Accelerating to sixty-five miles per hour, Scott felt his stomach tilt as the truck shot up a little hill and rose to two wheels for a second.  Shooting down the hill, he gave a sudden yell.
            A young woman stood directly in the middle of the road, twenty feet ahead!
            Scott turned hard to the left, and seeing no room there, swerved hard to the right, towards the river.  The vehicle began skidding, and Scott yanked the wheel violently towards the woman.  Better to kill a clueless pedestrian than end up under the dark blue icy river.
            The truck’s tires squealed as it turned a hundred and eighty degrees and finally stopped.  Scott, breathing hard, peered through the frosty windshield.  The woman had disappeared.  She had to be under the truck. 
            “No way am I getting incarcerated for this moron,” Scott muttered.  Switching his truck into first gear, he was beginning to edge down the road when a hand blocked the windshield.
            “Whoa!”  Scott rolled down his window and blew smoky breaths into the night.  “Did I hit you?”
            The woman smiled, looking completely serene.  “No, don’t worry.”
            “Good.  Well, I’m on my way somewhere, so I…”
            “Can I get a ride with you down 232?  Just a few miles,” the woman said.
            “I don’t…”  Scott studied the woman’s face.  Her heavy clothes could hide anything.  The woman’s heavy eyelids and dark lashes were inviting.  Scott gazed into her eyes, which were round blue appealing circles.  “Okay.  Hop in quick.”
            Scott reached over and unlocked the passenger door.  The woman tried the door.  “Do you mind?  My fingers are numb.”
            Scott quickly opened the door, letting the woman take a seat before he closed it.  Then he rolled up his window and continued, slightly more cautiously, down the road.
            “You’re the second person I’ve seen out on this road tonight,” he said.  “It’s usually so empty.  Well, earlier in the night.  I’ve actually never driven it at this hour.”  He gestured at the clock, which read 2:22a.m. 
            The woman nodded.  “Your truck feels lovely.  It’s nice and warm in here.”
            “You can take off your hat and jacket, if you want.”  Scott watched carefully as the woman removed her scarf and hat, revealing a green moose sweater that clung to her chest.  Shaking her head, she tossed several tiny dots of snow all over the front seat.  Her hair was a shadowy black, and her skin was chalky.
            “Are you going home?” Scott asked.  He glanced at the empty road for a moment, and then back at the youthful face of his passenger.
            “Yes.”  The woman paused.  “I’m so glad you picked me up.  I don’t want to be on the road at this hour.”
            “It’s so dark, in the snow, and this freezing temperature.  You’re lucky you’re okay.  Where’d you come from?” Scott demanded.
            “In just a few minutes, when it’s 2:32, you don’t want to be on this road alone.”
            “Sorry?”  Scott studied the woman’s smooth cheeks.  “What do you mean, you don’t want to be alone?”
            “That’s when the Ghost of Ricker Pond roams,” the woman said seriously.
            Scott chuckled.  “At this time of night in rural Vermont, ghost stories have a real good effect.  Go on, it’ll keep me alert!”
            The woman stared hard at Scott.  “All legends have a degree of truth to them.  Listen carefully.  This will affect you.  You have to follow certain steps to protect yourself against this ghost.”
            “And what are those?”  Scott turned off the truck’s radio.
            “The ghost was a man who was killed in a hit and run accident, twenty-nine years ago.  Before the collision, four vehicles passed by him without stopping, leaving him disoriented and hypothermic.  He died on the black ice in isolation.  In retribution, the spirit of the man seeks out four drivers a year, killing each of them in violent ways that sound like accidents.”
            “That’s a nice story.  Revenge of the ghost, huh?”
            “Revenge is a great deed.  There is no feeling like a satisfied vengeance,” the woman said coolly.
            Scott laughed.  “In that case, I guess I’m in trouble!  I saw a hitchhiker dude a little while ago.  Didn’t pick him up.  Too cold to make unexpected stops!”
            The woman nodded.  “That was a poor idea.”
            “So this ghost… what does it look like?” Scott asked, snickering.  Glancing at the woman, he did a double take.  Her previously flawless facial skin looked like a strawberry, red with tiny black spots.  Her hair, which had looked so smooth and shiny, looked more like a horse’s mane.
            “It looks like the man who was killed,” the woman said.
            “And… the ghost… what does it do?” Scott asked, hardly listening.  Had the woman’s nose protruded in such a jagged shape before?
            “The ghost does nothing.  If you see the ghost, you die at 2:32,” the woman said, shrugging.  Scott glanced at his truck’s clock.  It was 2:29.
            “Well, thanks for the warning.  Are we coming up on your house?”
            The woman nodded.  “Oh, yes.  You can let me off soon.  We should be there in about three minutes.”
            Scott tried to watch the road, but he felt an irresistible urge to watch the woman.  All her pure feminine qualities had melted from her face like hot wax.  He realized, suddenly, that she looked like a man with a five o’ clock shadow.  Her hair, which had been tucked into her sweater, no longer looked like it could reach her back.  It looked short and manly.
            “You know what?  Maybe I better let you off.  I have to make a call.”
            “We’re really close.  Just a couple more turns,” the woman said, her voice getting huskier.  Scott gripped the steering wheel like a baby grasping a finger.  The heat in the truck seemed to be going cold.
            “One dead person, yes.  One for each driver who didn’t stop,” the woman said without expression.
            Scott turned a slight corner.  “You can stop telling that story, now.”
            The clock read 2:31. 
            The woman suddenly jolted in her seat.  Scott turned and watched in horror as she clenched her teeth and hissed loudly.  “Are you okay?  What’s wrong?” he yelled.
            The passenger’s back arched violently, and she turned to Scott, a hideous grin on her face.  “The accident happened right here.  At Ricker’s Pond.”  She yanked her sweater over her head.
            Scott screamed.  The figure sitting beside him was clearly a man, wearing a black jacket, a face mask, and a red scarf.  Blobs of blood dripped from the jacket.
            Transfixed by the horrible sight, Scott fumbled with his seatbelt.  “You can let me out now.  We’re here!” his bloodied passenger said.  She glared straight into his eyes, and Scott saw that the azure glint was gone.  They were completely black.
It was 2:32.  Desperately grabbing at the doorknob, Scott tried to open his door.  He saw the animal ahead a split second later. 
It looked like a deer on steroids.  Scott pounded the brake with all his might.  It would not depress.  Scott shouted, pounding it rapidly with his foot.  The gigantic beast stared questioningly at him, its antlers high above the truck.  
Scott’s mouth opened wide in a helpless bellow as the truck rammed the moose at seventy miles per hour, shattering, bending, and snapping everything.
Twenty minutes later, a vehicle pulled up.  An old man leapt out and jogged around the crushed truck, searching for survivors.  There was one man in the wreckage, clearly dead, next to the truck’s clock, which blinked 2:32 over and over again.
Shaking his head, the old man walked back to his car.  Sitting in his passenger seat, staring silently, was a male hitchhiker wearing a black jacket and a red scarf.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Girl in the Dark


Girl in the Dark
This story is based on my experiences with my beloved pug Tres.  
I think I've captured the essence of pugs in this story.  Enjoy!

 
          I remember the last time I saw her.  I had carried my last bag to the car, and Dad was waiting in the driver’s seat.  I could see by his stare and the deep wrinkles on his forehead that he was getting impatient.  Zoe came running up to me and smacked her butt down on my shoe.  I attempted to lift my foot, but she held her legs protectively over it.  I kneeled in front of her.
            “I’ll be back to visit on Thanksgiving, Zoe,” I told her, “And I’ll bring you something nice.  I promise.”
            Zoe looked up at me with sad eyes.  I felt my throat tightening and tried to swallow.  Zoe might not have minded my being an emotional wreck, but it would annoy Dad.  He was not the type to tolerate anything getting in the way of his routine.
            I lifted Zoe off my shoe and scratched her favorite spot on her belly, between her fifth and sixth teats, kissing her head.  “I know you’ve never been apart for me for more than four days,” I whispered.  She cocked her head and made a whining sound.  I stood up and edged backward towards the front door.  Zoe flopped on her back and shone her wide brown eyes in my direction.  Fighting all my instincts, I slammed the front door and turned away, hurrying to the garage to join Dad.
            “Great, let’s go,” he grunted, turning on the ignition.
            I sat beside him and began lecturing him as he backed out of the driveway.  “…Remember that she really needs eye drops once a day; otherwise she gets all this goop under her eyes.  And since you hate vacuuming, you should try to comb her daily too… her hairs attach to everything if you don’t…”
            “I can handle a dog.  I had three before you were born,” Dad snapped.  I thought he would cry as we left the house, but his eyes were dry.  He knew that my toughest goodbye had already occurred.
            I fell silent, and neither of us spoke the rest of the way to college.

            I called home twice during orientation week, and everything was fine.  Zoe was perturbed, of course.  Each time my name was mentioned, she began crying, running in circles, and standing watch at the doorway.  Dad said she refused to eat for a day, but she gave in when he offered her a piece of cheese.  She curled up on my bed every night and could not be pulled out.  Dad asked me questions, like how was my roommate, and did I think the food was as lousy as my advisor said.  I told him each superficial detail, envisioning Zoe listening, as she always did.  I knew that Dad would neglect to clean her wrinkles and walk her a quarter mile a day; I could not really blame him.  He worked nights and supported me alone. 
            Then I called Friday evening, after the first week of classes.  Dad answered the phone on the third ring, and his “Hello?” sounded a bit frazzled.
            “Hey Dad, it’s me.”
            “Oh.  I can’t talk now, I’m busy with… things.  Want to call me tomorrow?”
            “Uh… sure.”  I hung up and stared at the phone, puzzled.  Dad was always willing to talk, even if he was on his way out the door.
            He called me two hours later, at ten o’ clock.  “Hey, Lizzie.  I’m sorry I didn’t talk to you earlier.  “I didn’t want to give you bad news before I was sure.  But now… I’m pretty sure.”  I felt a buzzing in my head.  “Honey… Zoe’s gone.”
            I did not want to hear the rest, but Dad went on, “I was watching the video of your high school graduation on my computer.  Zoe heard your voice and came running.  She was really upset when she couldn’t find you.  For the rest of the day, she lay on the carpet, looking depressed.  When I took her out that evening, she just ran off into the woods.  It was starting to get dark, so I looked for her right away instead of giving her time to play.  But she didn’t answer me.  I never saw or heard her again… she just disappeared.  I just came in from looking for her.  I just… she’s been… I’m sorry, Lizzie.”
            My voice cracked, but I ignored it.  “Are you going to leave the door open for her, in case?”
            “Sure, I’ll leave the garage open.  But Lizzie… I just don’t want you to let this distract you from your classes.  I told you because you’ve never let things affect your work before.  Like when Mom passed away…”
            “This isn’t a death, Dad!” I yelled at the phone.  “Just leave the door open for her and look more when you have time!  I trusted you!”
            Slamming the phone down, I got into bed.  The pillow muffled my sobs, but my roommate sensed the unusual silence when she came in an hour later.  “Is everything okay?” she asked, and I replied with a grunt.

            We got Zoe three years ago, when Mom was sick.  Dad intended to keep her as a companion for Mom, to keep her happy.  He wanted to pick out a flawless, well-bred French bulldog from his friend’s pug’s litter, but Mom insisted that we go to the county pound.
            We walked by an energetic beagle, who hopped several feet in the air as we passed.  The next cage was a dachshund with droopy ears and a tail that wagged pathetically.  Mom stopped to coo at him, and I kept moving forward.  After passing a woolly golden retriever mix, a ratty looking chihuahua mix, and a cocker spaniel, I stopped at the last cage in the hallway. 
            A fat pug as black as coal and plump as a ripe grape perked up when I arrived.  She gazed at me sadly, and I had the strongest urge ever to break open the cage and let her out.  As I watched her, she stood up and waddled to the cage bars, leaping up with surprising agility for her size.  I stuck a hand through the bars and she rested her chin on my fingers.  I got up close to her so I could see her face, which was shadowy in the dark.
            Her forehead had deep wrinkles that seemed to form the letter Z.  Her nose was smooshed up like someone had punched it into her eyes.  Her little red tongue poked out of her mouth, and she had a golden stripe that began between her velvet ears and extended to her curly little tail.  I knew I was in love.
            “Mom!  Dad!” I called, not moving from the spot.  “I’ve found a really nice one!”
            Dad arrived first, telling Mom how the dachshund might have been a mutt, and glared at the pug.  “I don’t think so, Lizzie.  Mom doesn’t want a pug.  Her friend told her they’re unhealthy, shed a lot, and get fat easily…”
            “Let’s see,” Mom said, walking up to the cage.  She smiled at the sight of the pug leaning against the bars, trying to poke me with her paw.  “I don’t know, Rob.  This dog seems really friendly.  She likes Lizzie, anyway.”  She put her hand in front of the pug’s face.  The pug sniffed it eagerly, but then edged towards me.
            Mom laughed.  “I don’t think we can tell Lizzie no, Rob.  She and this pug look completely fixated.  There are no French bulldogs here anyway.”
            Dad sputtered, “But my friend…”
            “Your friend doesn’t treat his dogs well, and I’m not paying him hundreds of dollars for a dog just because its parents are supposedly attractive for that breed!  No, this pug seems really nice.  Let’s take it to the playroom and make sure.”
            As if to spite Dad’s protests, the pug approached him in the playroom and sat on his lap.  Dad patted her head, which made her close her eyes and look content.  After a moment, she strolled over to Mom and flopped on her back.  Mom giggled and scratched her, and the pug’s eyes rolled back so only the whites showed.  “She looks like a zombie,” Dad commented.
            Finally, I snatched the pug and put her on my lap.  She snuggled against my belly and was snoring within fifteen seconds.  Mom gazed at her dreamily, and Dad nodded his consent.  I smiled and scratched the pug’s chin.  She was ours!  As Dad stood up to fill out the paperwork, the pug began making squeaking sounds, and her belly began literally popping like popcorn in a microwave.  Mom and I stared at each other in puzzlement, but when the noises stopped, she shrugged and got up to join Dad. 
            Because of the Z on her forehead, I announced on the car ride home that she should be called Zoe, after my favorite fat cartoon character.  My parents agreed, and Zoe stood up on my lap, digging her claws into my legs out of nervousness.  She stood on guard all the way home.

            I know I am rash.  But Dad cannot expect any other reaction from me.  Zoe is my baby.  I love her.  So of course I will search for her until I find her.
            On my way home (by taxi—another reason Dad will be more than angry), I stop at the pound we bought her from.  I slip a quick note under the door: Zoe the pug is lost.  She’s wearing identification and is micro-chipped.  If anyone brings her in, please let us know as soon as possible!  Lizzie Kalev.
            I do not bother going inside when I get home.  I brought a flashlight, and that is all I will need.  A cell phone will only enable Dad to annoy me.  I am used to walking in the woods at night; the animal cries and darkness do not bother me.  Tonight though, I feel my legs shaking.  I feel like every cry could be a predator pursuing Zoe, who can sprint but not run far.  Every movement in the dark could be Zoe, mortally wounded and searching desperately for me.
            Marching purposefully into the thick brush, I scream her name into the icy cold night.  “Zoe!  Zoe, come out!”  I hear nothing but crickets and night birds responding.  I move faster, knowing that Dad probably heard and will follow me.  I do not want him involved; he can sleep after a hard week at work.  This is my affair.
            My flashlight dimly shines on lumpy tree roots and tall grass.  Zoe could be lying anywhere, and I could miss her.  I shout again.  “Zoe!”
            I see a light flick on behind me at the edge of the woods.  Dad must be coming out.  My fingers are going numb fast; it is a frosty cold night.  I begin to run deeper into the woods, knowing that Zoe could be more than a mile deep by now.  “Zoe!  Zoe!”
            I can vaguely hear Dad’s voice hollering my name in back of me.  I charge deeper into the woods, thinking of her sweet wide eyes and rotten fish kisses.  I do not know why I left her in Dad’s care when he always detested her.  “Zoe!”
            I hear a brushing noise to my left and change direction.  My left hand holding the flashlight is growing cold, so I switch to my right, placing my left in my coat pocket.  I flick my arm around, shining the flashlight towards the noise.  I see nothing but grass and dead leaves, but make sure to light up every inch of the ground. 
            Zoe is my inspiration.  I knew that living at college was a bad idea.  It is only a half hour drive, and I told Dad I would live at home.  He told me that immersion would help me adjust to living away from home eventually.  Immersion into what?  All I could think of was home!
            I feel out of breath; the icy air feels like it is freezing my upper nose shut.  Nothing clogs the nostril openings, but I cannot breathe through them.  I think I hear footsteps tromping leaves behind me, but maybe it is in my head.
            I continue calling her name, my voice shrieking at a pitch it never has reached.  I hear a strange echo and follow the sound.  There is a small cave ahead.  Shining my flashlight in, I call, “Zoe?”  The response is abrupt: a loud groaning sound that could only come from my worst fear in these woods: a bear.
            I turn around sharply and clumsily, bashing the flashlight against a tree.  It snaps off and flies out of my hands like a grasshopper, landing with a soft crunch in some wet leaves.  The groaning sound echoes from the cave again, and I sprint away blindly.
            I can only slightly make out the silhouettes of trees as I run back the direction I came from.  Zoe is probably facing the same cold and beasts as I am, and that does not make me feel any better.  My foot suddenly sloshes through a gloppy puddle.  There was no water or mud on the way out here.  My feet splash through a few inches of liquid.
            I continue running, only slightly aware of the splashes growing increasingly loud.  My shoes suddenly soak through and become icy weights.  I feel the veins in my head throbbing; I am not used to running like this. 
            I stop to get my bearings.  I no longer hear any chirping or groaning—just the rush of water running over my feet and tickling my ankles.  I glance around.  Nothing but trees surrounds me.  Thickening clouds are blocking out any starlight, and real fear suddenly clenches my stomach and sparks a wave of nausea.  I am lost in the dark.
            I spin around wildly.  The absence of friendly sounds makes my ears ring eerily.  The cold wind swirling around me gives the sensation of being sucked into a black hole.  I decide to change my direction by ninety degrees. 
            As I wade through the water, my brain tells me I am wrong before my legs act.  Suddenly, I am waist-deep in a strong current!  I scream and grab in the air feebly, but my numb fingers feel nothing but space.  I feel myself being sucked at high speed towards deeper water, or perhaps a waterfall.  I kick out hard and try to grab lower.
            This time I snatch a thick, low-reaching tree branch.  The water angrily yanks me feet forward, but I cling on grimly.  Slowly, I pull myself upwards.  Every muscle in my body is either throbbing in pain or numb from the cold.  But I know I have to pull out of the grip of the water.  My knees are out; now my feet are out.  I feel my pants dripping water into the current, a tiny trickle.  I thrash my legs around, trying to find dry land to rest them.  When I feel none, I yank myself onto the tree limb.  I feel a jab against my eyes, and a throbbing in my head.  I tumble back and nearly fall off the tree limb.  Holding a hand to my face, I feel wetness on my cheeks.  Trying to ignore it, I stretch my feet down towards the ground.  Again I lose my balance and tumble down a couple feet, but I hit slightly damp grass.  I lie on my back and think about Zoe.  My eyes, arms, and legs’ stinging feels unimportant.
            I try to stay awake, but every muscle is weak.  I need to rest before I can venture out again.  Perhaps I should wait until morning when it is light.  I lie still for a bit, struggling to stay awake, somewhere in the state of half-consciousness.
            After what seems like an hour, I think I hear a human voice calling from a distance.  I yell feebly.  I know that Dad is the only one who could be out looking for me, but for some reason, I holler my pug’s name.  “Zoe!”
            “Lizzie!” 
I hear footsteps crunching and splashing, and shriek, “Don’t step in the water, it’s too deep!”  Only then do I allow myself to give in: the sounds of water slowly fade.
           
            Aching.  Warm fluff.  Something tight wrapped around my head.  I moan as these sensations bring me into consciousness.  I cannot see.  At least I am warm.
            “Dad?” I ask. 
            I hear his voice from just above me; the comforting ring makes the room feel warmer.  “Lizzie, can you hear me?”
            “Yeah, but I can’t see you.”
            “I know.”  Dad is silent.  I hear the heater.
            “Dad, where are we?”
            “You’re in bed in your room, honey.”
            “I couldn’t find Zoe.”
            Dad says, “That… that dog’s all you care about?”
            “Well, she’s why I came back.”
            “Your eyes, Lizzie.  Aren’t you concerned about your eyes?”
            “What about them?”
            “They’re a mess, Lizzie!  I called an ambulance.  They’re on their way.  I had to wrap a cloth around your head to keep your eyes in your head!”  He is yelling.
            “I’m sorry,” I mumble.
            “Why are you apologizing to me?  They’re your eyes!”
            “I know I shouldn’t have come.  I was just worried.”
            Dad makes a strange noise with his teeth.  “I know.”  He seems to be considering something.  “I guess I might as well make you feel better.  You can’t bring her to the hospital, though.”  I hear him open the door, and swift little footsteps patter across the floor!
            I hear the clinking of her tags and her tiny crying sounds as she leaps onto the bed.  “Zoe!”  I hug her tight and smell her rancid breath.  I can feel her smooshy mask and soft fur; she seems to be unharmed.  “Where’d you find her?”
            “She must have wandered back inside while I was looking for her.  She was under your bed,” Dad says slowly.
            “Well, that’s great!  Was there anything wrong with her?”
            “Nothing.”  I can hear the irony dripping from Dad’s tone.
            “Well, now we’re all together again.  The way it was,” I say.
            Dad mutters, “For a bit.  After they have a look at your eyes, you should head back to school.  Even if… there’s permanent damage.  There are ways to function nowadays.”
            I laugh.  “Don’t be silly, Dad.  I can’t go back to school now.”  Zoe tries to walk towards my feet, but I pull her back. 
“Lizzie…” Dad starts to say something, but then stops.  Then he stomps out of the room and slams the door behind him. 
            A few seconds later, I hear the wail of a siren approaching.  Holding Zoe in the corner of my arm, I push myself up and out of bed.  It is not difficult to find the door and open it.  As I walk down the hallway, Zoe squeaks in alarm.  I bump a small table and it tips over, slamming and shattering an object on top of it.  Zoe leaps out of my hands and skitters away.  After feeling around for a full minute, I reach the front door.  “Lizzie!” Dad calls from the kitchen.
            “I’m fine, Dad!” I call.  And I am.  I open the door and step boldly outside to meet the waiting ambulance.