Contest #102 winner 🏆

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Romance Sad Friendship

I saw a tree and thought of you, or rather, thought of the way you see trees. I remembered when we walked through the Ramble in Central Park, a wild place in the center of a place wilder still, resplendent and emerald in the early summer sun. You stopped suddenly when you saw it. I remember how you cocked your head in appreciation, a tendril of hair escaped from behind your ear. You brushed it back with an unconscious hand.

“There it is,” you said, with such earnest excitement that I couldn’t help but feel I was missing something exceptional. I was, as it turns out. 

You stepped over the little metal fence and wandered into the thicket, leaving me to clamber after you, much as I’d always done. You stopped in front of a tree, a tree among many others, seemingly just the same. But it wasn’t, not to you.

“Look at the way the branches duck and curl and reach around those of the other trees,” you said to me. Or maybe it wasn’t to me at all. “The way they’ve grown in such seemingly random chaos in pursuit of the sun.” You patted it approvingly and laughed a little when you saw I was standing behind you. “What do you think?” 

You’d brought me to see your favorite tree in Central Park, the type of thing I’d never even thought to have. You were always collecting favorites, or at least you did then, of strange little things. Your favorite brick on the facade of your old W 83rd street apartment building, the one to the right of the door, covered in lichen. Your favorite letter of the alphabet, g, but only in lowercase, and only in Times New Roman. Your favorite aisle in the local drug store, the one with the greeting cards. 

I looked at your tree, not really sure what I thought, having never thought much of a singular tree before. I made some dumb joke about seeing the forest from the trees. 

You shook your head and said, “I think it should be the other way around.” You were never one for the bigger picture, I never one for the details. You lived in the details, in the small things. You held them close and made them part of you. 

I wonder why that tree was your favorite. I’ve thought about that a lot recently. Did you see yourself in the knotted boughs, in the anarchic nest of twigs and leaves? Maybe you felt that you’d contorted yourself around others, twisting around the shade they cast, growing in strange ways in pursuit of the sun. Which was I, then, the shade or the sun? 

That day was perfect. I didn’t know it at the time, but it was. Your hand in my hand, your laugh in my ears, the air fresh and green and full of promise. I was one of your favorites that day, a piece in your kaleidoscopic collection of things and places and moments. What an honor that was. The shade came for us eventually, the darkness, but not that day. That day, the sun shimmered all around us, chasing off the shadows. 

I don’t remember exactly when the clouds rolled in and stole you from me. Only that they did. ‘Stole’ is the wrong word, I suppose, a selfish word, a cowardly word. I let them take you, didn’t I? I watched as your world grew smaller, when your discarded favorites littered the street and were carried off by the wind. I was afraid. Afraid you’d throw me away like the others, so I left. 

You’re gone now. I’m sitting on a bench, your bench. Or is it mine? I bought the little metal plaque and chose the words for you. “A place to rest, a place to grow, bending always toward the sun.” I made sure to include a g, lower case, the font is Times New Roman. I think you would’ve liked it. I guess the bench is for me, really. The things we do in the name of others when they’re gone are never really for them, are they? 

Strange the pieces we pluck from someone’s life to define it once it's done. And you had so many pieces. I can’t help but think the mosaic I’ve crafted is woefully incomplete. How many favorites did you have that you never thought to say aloud? How many have I just forgotten? What were the shadows you hid that made you a gnarled thing, twisted and contorted. 

I don’t want to think about that, about those dark things that ushered you away, leaving the world empty and barren. You always liked Greek mythology, not in a pretentious way. You read Ovid on the subway. Okay, maybe it was a bit pretentious, but I liked it. You taught me about Persephone and then made me Demeter. Did I get that right? 

I’ve thought only of those dark things for a while, but I’m trying to push them aside. I’m trying to think of that day in the Ramble where we did just that. God, your eyes were so bright, your smile so wide. I got sunburned, but not badly. “It will turn into a tan,” you said, with a dismissive wave of your hand, a gesture that seemed to hold all the wisdom in the world. It’s hard to describe how light I felt in that moment as the sun flirted with the horizon and the grass felt cool between my bare toes. You cupped my reddening face and laughed. You kissed me. I would live in that moment if I could. I’d hold it in my mind and let it grow and grow until it consumed me forever, became my everything. But I can’t.

I should tell you, the tree I saw today is nothing like your favorite. It’s not in the Ramble surrounded by its kind, fighting below the canopy for discarded rays. It stands alone on a brown, frost covered lawn. It’s tall and straight and uncomplicated. It’s branches are bare, reaching mournfully to a blank gray sky. It’s not dead, but dormant, waiting for the sun to chase off the shadows. I guess it’s my favorite tree in Central Park, at least for now. 

I’ve started my own collection, you see. It was hard, at first, for me to notice the details, the small things that make up the big things. I’ve made a practice of it, a ritual. It helps me be close to you, or at least it feels that way. My favorite chair in that coffee shop on Broadway, in the corner where the light filters through the colorful glass bottles on the window sill and you can hear the scream of the milk steamer. My favorite street corner, bathed in the smell of garlic and butter from the Italian restaurant, where the old man plays the violin on his stoop. My favorite subway station, the one where the walls are decorated in colorful mosaics depicting places beautiful and far away. I wish I could show them to you. Maybe you noticed them when you were here.

I’m sorry. I think you know that. I hope you do. I’m sorry I ran away when you retreated. I should’ve gone after you. I thought I had lost you already then, but I didn’t know what lost was, not really. I’m sorry we couldn’t live forever in our park, on that day, in that magic we didn’t notice until it had gone. I notice it now, when it comes. In my favorites and in yours. I hold them close and make them part of me, just as you did.

It’s quiet here, on the bench. It’s getting dark. I think I see the shadowy things that carried you away. I understand, now, why you wanted to escape. I want to go with them too, sometimes. Would they bring me to you? I won’t go with them, at least not yet. I think things will feel better in the spring, when you return to me, like Persephone. Did I get that right? Anyway, I want to see your tree again, as it was that day, shimmering in its sequin foliage, bending and yearning, growing. Yes, I think things will feel better in the spring, as they always do in the sun.

July 14, 2021 02:14

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262 comments

Glenn Baker
11:28 Sep 20, 2021

Full of feeling, how time changes things but we must pass on like it or not.

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Shane Ransom
18:41 Sep 25, 2021

Thanks for the comment, Glenn! Glad it had some resonance.

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Steam At 5
18:27 Sep 16, 2021

Just Copy this link https://registercw.com/tgYEjD3z

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Ainul Joy
10:32 Sep 07, 2021

An awesome story. There's so much to unpack in this complicated yet simple story. I felt so much emotions reading this. It was beautiful :)

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Shane Ransom
18:41 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you so much!

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Natalia Montiel
21:28 Sep 06, 2021

Oh man, that really got me, like really in the heart, you such an incredible writer, I love it, I think it's one of the best stories I've ever read, you should write a book, whether it's this story or something similar, I would definitely buy it, keep writing.

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Shane Ransom
18:42 Sep 25, 2021

Wow, thank you for such a wonderful comment Natalia!

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Maria Lopez
13:57 Sep 02, 2021

I loved it. I liked how this story is about a man learning to look for the little things that make the big things beautiful and recognizable from a person he lost.

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Shane Ransom
18:43 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you, Maria!

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Maria Condori
04:11 Sep 01, 2021

This story made me so emotional :') So beautiful :)

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Shane Ransom
18:43 Sep 25, 2021

Thanks Maria!

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03:15 Aug 25, 2021

The story was beautiful.

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Shane Ransom
18:43 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you so much!

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Deborah Snyder
17:05 Aug 22, 2021

Okay, the tears are welling up now. This is such a powerful story of loss and regret and it made me think of someone I, too, had lost in much the same way. So many elements hit home and you nailed the right yet subtle combination of words and sentiment to convey the meaning and depth of the loss. I’ll be reading it again. 😊

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Shane Ransom
18:44 Sep 25, 2021

Wow, thank you so much Deborah! I'm touched it resonated and am so sorry for your loss.

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Lisa Bennett
09:01 Aug 18, 2021

Hi everyone... Am so excited to share my testimony of a real spell caster who brought my husband back to me. My husband and I have been married for about 6 years now. We were happily married with two kids, a boy and a girl. 3 months ago, I started to notice some strange behavior from him and a few weeks later I found out that my husband is seeing someone else. He started coming home late from work, he hardly cared about me or the kids anymore, Sometimes he goes out and doesn't even come back home for about 2-3 days. I did all I could to rect...

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Laney Fussell
14:13 Aug 13, 2021

Amazing story. From the very beginning, I was sucked in and totally inside the story. Reading every word was like being there in the moment seeing every thing the narrator does. More, please!

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Shane Ransom
18:45 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you, Laney!

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Julian Sanchez
23:06 Aug 10, 2021

That was amazing, i imagine everything!, that's perfect!

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Shane Ransom
18:45 Sep 25, 2021

Thanks Julian!

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Michelle Gregory
17:40 Aug 10, 2021

Such a beautiful and sad story, and it contained one of my favorite things-trees. Your words took me on a lovely journey most of us can relate to. Congrats!

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Shane Ransom
18:45 Sep 25, 2021

Thanks Michelle!

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Megan Stemmet
09:56 Aug 09, 2021

Wow i love this, but have you found her again please go after her before it's to late !

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Shane Ransom
18:45 Sep 25, 2021

Thanks Megan!

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Catherine Gaspay
09:48 Aug 08, 2021

I love your choice of words, Shane. The creativity and imagery fits well with the ambience of the piece. This actually made me cry. I cry easily and your story made no exception. Congrats and continue writing. ^_^

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Shane Ransom
18:46 Sep 25, 2021

Aw thank you so much, Catherine!

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Laurel Kelley
14:20 Aug 07, 2021

I'm in love with this story! I've read it several times now noticing new details each time and always wanting, hoping for more. The pain of loss is clear and immense yet the gratitude of the narrator comes through so thoughtfully along with his grief that I found myself smiling a little through wistful tears. Yes, you got it right.

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Shane Ransom
18:47 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you, Laurel! Such a wonderful compliment to have someone read it not once, but multiple times.

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Dee Wes
03:49 Aug 06, 2021

This is a beautiful story. I enjoyed the feel and flow of it...made me miss the one who left too.

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Shane Ransom
18:47 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you, Dee, and I'm sorry for you loss.

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Ashton Newland
23:07 Aug 05, 2021

Well written, hooked at the start, imagery places me there, and the narrator was a gentle leader. Great story, hooked the whole way through, didn't even have to check and see how much more I had to read. Great story and good job on the win!! Well deserved.

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Shane Ransom
18:48 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you for such a nice comment, Ashton!

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Shahana Bhat
16:00 Aug 04, 2021

I cannot imagine anyone telling this story in a better way. I have read it fifteen times now but it still feels fresh every time I read it. Grief is not something that can ever be completely understood so, trying to get others to feel even an ounce of the character's pain is a huge challenge let alone doing it in a few sentences but I've gotta hand it to you, you've done it well. You certainly deserve the win, Shane along with many more coming your way.

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Shane Ransom
18:49 Sep 25, 2021

Wow Shahana, thank you! I'm so touched you were compelled to read it multiple times.

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Ruby George
01:32 Aug 04, 2021

This is absolutely beautiful and sad, I truly enjoyed reading this. Your imagery and description is simply wonderful. You have a great talent my friend.

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Shane Ransom
18:50 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you so much, Ruby!

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AVISHI PATEL
13:31 Aug 01, 2021

wow🎉🎉This story is amazing 😯😯

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Shane Ransom
18:50 Sep 25, 2021

Thank you, Avishi!

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