Contest #190 winner 🏆

Dear Coldplay, I Love You. Wait. Scratch That.

Submitted into Contest #190 in response to: Write a story about a fandom... view prompt

90 comments

Coming of Age

This letter isn’t to you, the band. This letter is for the band’s front man.


My apologies. Let’s start over.


Dear Chris Martin,

I love you. But we need to break up.


You don’t know me, Chris. We’ve never met. You grazed my hands at a concert once, but I’m told that doesn’t count. But you and I have history, my dear; decades of triumph, grief, adoration, frustration knotted and woven together in indecipherable patterns. I’ve discovered, in recent contemplations about our relations, it’s nearly impossible to unravel.


This letter is a risk. I’m sharing it regardless. So here we go, Chris Martin. I’m laying it all out like an atlas.


At this point [if you’ve even read to this point] you’re probably wondering about Drew. Who’s Drew? My husband. Yes, I’m married, but don’t worry. Drew knows about you. He’s not necessarily cool with you, but you won’t get in trouble for this. I will.


It’s just once, at your concert–a long time ago–you gyrated on a piano bench, and, well, what can you expect? And this was during my first date with Drew.


Way to make it complicated, Chris.


But I knew you way before Drew. I loved you before Drew, too. I discovered Coldplay when a friend suggested I “check out this hot, new band,” and loaned a CD. Oh, I checked it out, alright. On repeat. Waiting for a boyfriend to help with my flat tire on a busy interstate. The boyfriend never showed up. You don’t know this [because you weren’t there], but you and I got to know each other in that silver Taurus. I learned your words, your rhythms of speech. You sang to me in a voice congested, yet melodic. When I tried to call the boyfriend again, you sent a shiver. I nodded, wiped tears, contacted a state trooper instead. Despite not knowing what you looked like, we gained a level of intimacy in that moment.


I remember in magnificent detail the first time I matched your voice to the physical specimen. In college, I studied in a buried, wood-paneled bar several miles off campus. The place had a musty smell; everything inside was pliable and damp. The square windows, which let in no light, rattled violently whenever a train passed. I also frequented the bar because I liked the bartender. He was tall and thin, with long, graceful fingers that he used to pull back his blonde hair. Whenever he did this, I'd catch a glimpse of the four-star tattoo on his forearm. During downtime, which there was much of, he’d crane over the stocks page in a passenger's left-behind tribune. I went there once a week. He never noticed me. But you did, Chris Martin.


From the bar's dismal corner TV, I heard familiar chords and tuned in. I recognized your voice from a scary highway. I remembered crying in a Taurus as a gale of traffic blew by. I recalled the moment your voice held my hand and patted my knee until a state trooper arrived. It had been some time since; I didn’t realize you blossomed into a music video career. Our eyes locked through the bar’s dusty screen. You walked along a turbulent lakeshore in slow motion and never took your eyes off me. You crooned of skin and bones; you promised something beautiful.


I dropped my textbook.


You claimed to love me so.


The book fell loudly to the floor.


Told me to look at the stars. They shone for me. You said it.


I didn’t pick the book back up.


I’ve shared this moment with Drew. Several times. The last recount, he folded hands and sighed, “Please stop talking about Chris Martin.” I also told a student of mine about this moment. In my defense, I had to! Next to my desk in the classroom, I pinned the February 2016 Rolling Stone magazine cover where you’re propped on an elbow in a field of flowers, gazing dreamily. Sometimes — especially after a hard day — I’d rest on my elbow. Cradle my head. Gaze back.


The student tip-toed in after school to ask about homework and caught me doing this. In a rapid flurry, I bumbled how your voice felt like a barometric drop, how your eyes, the color of sky and metal, guided me at a dirty tavern. The student began to tip-toe out. I waved them back and described the train station bar from college. How our eyes locked on a temperamental lakeshore (through a television screen, of course).


Don’t fear, Chris Martin. I possess no stalker tendencies. Drew’s not even worried. Like I said, he knows about you. Ok…he worried once. I asked him to wrap his fingers in rainbow tape, toss color bombs upon arrival, and speak in a British accent. He said no.


I did behave on my first date with Drew, which, if you remember, was your concert. We met while you performed at an outdoor venue, aglow in dense Spring air. A steep grassy hill, damp from morning rain, sucked at our soles. Red and blue lights oscillated. Drew and I made eye contact. We smiled. Nodded. He made me giggle. I moved in closer. That night, the world disappeared, and I’m sorry Chris, so did you. While you head-banged a piano, Drew hooked my pinky with his, looked down and mouthed, “Can this be our first date?” I nodded up at him.


I didn’t tell Drew about you right away. In those early days of starting my life with him, you’d pop into town here and there. I’d still come see you perform. It was at one of those concerts I finally confessed our relationship. Well, confess might not be the right word. Drew discovered us. It’s your fault. First of all, you grazed my hands. I had to scream. Secondly, you had been working out. I saw it when your t-shirt lifted in mid-air.


I clutched Drew, “Those abs,” I gasped, “like steel window panes.”


“Who me?” Drew looked around bewildered.


“No. Chris Martin.” I turned to the man standing behind us and repeated my anatomical observation to seek agreement. The man stared. Pulled his kid in close. So I said to the kid, about thirteen, “Don’t you see? Those pecs… sturdy thighs…and eyes…like blue humidity.” Drew tugged hard at my sleeve. Later, my husband suggested I apologize to the father. I did. But Drew wasn’t mad at me. How could he be? It was harmless flirtation back then, Chris. You’d spring up, wave some glow sticks around, maybe give a little ab peek. I’d squeal, and you’d leave.


You and I didn’t get intimate again for a long time. Years, actually. I already had a teaching career I never wanted to leave. Drew and I already lived in our forever-home on a street lined with one-hundred-year-old trees. I hadn’t, in my life, experienced any real tragedy. Until our child passed away.


Drew doesn’t know this, Chris. In the months following my son’s death (with insomnia as a side effect of grief), I’d sneak out of bed in the middle of the night and watch your music videos. I started with the first video, the one where you’re walking along a lake. You were so young in that video. So foolish. Trudging that volatile shore in a light jacket. Your slapped red cheeks and defensive blinks told me you knew you were ill prepared. But you weathered it, Chris. In slow motion. And you never broke your gaze away from the camera. Away from me.


Wrapped in a knitted blanket, illuminated by the glow of a screen, I’d watch your other music videos for hours. But I always ended with the video that played in reverse. In this video, you’re a little older and appropriately dressed for the environment. You still moved in slow motion, and never broke your gaze from me. But you had to walk backwards through tunnels, bridges, and concrete. To the scene of the accident. The point of collision. You warned that no one said it would be easy. But nothing foretold it would be this hard. You and I both begged to go back to the start.


The song is The Scientist.


I told a woman at an Arizona truck stop about that song. I described how I snuck past security guards at a concert to be closer to you. No, not like stalker-close. Not those kinds of guards. I mean slipping past ticket attendants to exchange nosebleeds for the floor. I told the Arizona woman how Drew and I slithered through bodies in the rain. I told her how I held his hand and sang the lyrics. I didn’t tell her about you, Chris Martin. You were not part of that moment. Only me and Drew, spinning and spinning under a butane sky lit orange and blue.


After that concert, I felt more comfortable telling Drew about you [until he asked I stop describing your biceps and athletic agility]. This may hurt your feelings, but you became a marital joke between us. Like when the ‘conscious uncoupling’ thing happened — sorry, by the way — I’d tease that I was going to uncouple him and marry you. Drew would respond, “Ok, as long as I can be Chris Martin’s roadie.”


Drew doesn’t know this next part, though. In the wake of the pandemic, Drew sat me down at a table and said, “We are moving.” He has no idea you became involved with putting my forever home on the market and writing my letter of resignation. I sobbed after cleaning out my classroom. Then I couldn’t get out of bed. For three full days.


Insomnia can happen twice because of grief. So after the third day, you and I, Chris, began hooking up again. Nightly. While everyone slept, I’d creep out of the house, hand-lift the garage door, climb in my Jeep, put it in neutral, lights off, and allow gravity to pull me down to the street. In the middle of the night, I’d turn the ignition and leave.


Traveling interstates, choosing random exits, weaving through town streets until civilization emptied, I drove until I became lost. I’d pull onto earth, park amidst wind-whipped grasses, lay on the car's hood and stare at a sky full of Bic confetti. I always located the Little Dipper first. Its handle is easiest to see…four stars aligned perfectly. You don’t know this, Chris, but you and I became intimate again on the hood of that Jeep. Such history between us, I no longer needed to see your eyes on me or rewind a music video. Things changed. We discovered a deep, deep intimacy.


I only needed to feel your lyrics.


Sometimes I’d smoke, despite quitting two decades ago. I’d almost always weep. Sometimes I played your old CD, the one from a broken-down Taurus on an interstate. I’d think about how young and foolish we were. At that bar. At that lake. Wrapped in a blanket. I’d think of the experiences we shared [if you don’t remember them, it’s because you were never there].


I’d count how much was stolen in the wake of the pandemic.


During the weeks we prepared to move, I played a new song on repeat, the one where you promise to try and fix me. On those midnight rendezvous, no matter the climate, I’d open the Jeep’s windows and allow tears to stream down my face. I didn’t need to see you walking in slow motion anymore or being pummeled by a lake. Your words alone captured what it was like to lose something that can’t be replaced. You vowed lights would guide me home, so I’d whisper, “Ok Chris, take me.”


Then I’d twist my hair back, turn the ignition, and find my way back in reverse, traversing dirt roads, side streets, bridges, and highways. It didn’t matter the open patch of earth I chose to leave. Roads connected, intertwined, braided together intimately. Sometimes it took hours to unweave, but every time I made it home and pulled into the garage, headlights off, silent.


Then I’d crawl under the covers, hold my breath and wait. Because Drew always rolled over and put his arms around my waist. I’d nuzzle close. Exhale. Breathe.


When I couldn’t get out of bed after cleaning out the classroom I thought I’d never leave, Drew did the same thing, only he climbed in next to me. I didn’t expect that one to level me.


But it did. Like an 8.7 earthquake. After the violent rattling, I learned something about you in that moment, and something about that lake. We need to return to that brutal shore and stare eye to eye again. I was naive. I didn’t know any better back then. I needed to cut through the wind, wipe the mist from my eyes, and really see. I never needed you, Chris Martin. Not once. Those places we traversed were mere satellites of my own center of gravity. I was born and bred on that land; I understand every lakeshore, violet hill, and midnight sky intuitively. Those roads, those paths, even the interstate, guide me without you singing.


So good-bye, Chris Martin.


Love,

E.B.


March 22, 2023 23:37

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90 comments

Laurel Hanson
21:41 Mar 31, 2023

Outstanding. Nailed the prompt. Crafted a beautiful story of, I hesitate to say obsession, but perhaps misplaced affection?? Lyrical and authentic. And boy was I gladdened by the resolution. I felt like I was drowning in the devotion the MC had for the idol they believed Chris Martin to be. Maybe they were drowning too. So glad they freed themselves. "Those places we traversed were mere satellites of my own center of gravity." - capital line.

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David Sweet
20:31 Mar 31, 2023

Congratulations on the win, well-deserved! You have used some of these themes throughout your work, and you weave your narrative so well. Perhaps you will consider some way of fusing them into a comprehensive work, or as a series of narratives about your life in a longer project. Thanks so much for adding your voice to Reedsy.

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Éan Bird
22:24 Apr 12, 2023

Thank you, David. This is new territory, but I feel I may be blindly feeling my way down that path. Thanks for the encouragement and reading my little ‘project’.

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Doug Joseph
18:10 Mar 31, 2023

I love this. Enjoyed it from start to finish. Your descriptions of Coldplay songs made me smile too. I was hoping you would weave God Put A Smile On My Face in there, but to no avail! Well done!

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Éan Bird
00:59 Apr 13, 2023

Perhaps I should show you the rough draft. So many references (even a Kanye collaboration). God Put A Smile On My Face--heartbreaking edit 😉

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Mintako Datti
18:06 Mar 31, 2023

Amazing piece!

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Wally Schmidt
18:06 Mar 31, 2023

Éan what a beautiful story you've written, both poignant and humorous. Many people have sound tracks to important moments in their lives and I love how this piece takes us through those with Chis Martin. I also think many people have an awakening to realize that the person who is right there in there lives-who has always been right there in their lives- is the one holding everything together and they can now leave the lover, the beer, the fantasy, or the Chris Martin in their lives. Your writing swept me away but one of my favorite lines w...

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Bradon L
18:03 Mar 31, 2023

This was such a good take on this prompt! It was funny, heartwarming, emotional, and the Coldplay references sprinkled throughout were top notch. Well done. And congrats on the win🎉🎉

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Laura Orrantia
17:43 Mar 31, 2023

Wow... beautifully written and congrats on a well-deserved win!!

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Lorrie Bonnell
17:39 Mar 31, 2023

Interesting story. Well written and easy to read.

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Mary Bendickson
16:57 Mar 31, 2023

Congrats on the win. It was one of the first stories I read this week and knew it was good.

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Helen A Smith
16:34 Mar 31, 2023

Well done and congratulations 👏

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Laura Jarosz
02:46 Mar 31, 2023

Wow. I've never read anything like this. I love your voice. I love so much of the imagery here ('Bic confetti' is my favorite, and I will never see stars or concerts any other way now). Like others have said, when I first read this I was sure it was going to be comedy, and it has many hilarious moments, but it ends so powerfully. Thank you for sharing this with all of us.

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Rebecca Miles
07:09 Mar 30, 2023

I haven't read a letter take on a prompt for a while and I did enjoy the heady gush of this story. The initial part, charting the first date -poor Drew, was relatable for me; I have a teenage daughter and last year we went to see Harry Styles together in Wembley and since then it has been Harry fever all the way. You captured that headlong dive into fandom very well and how it verges on the fanatical (hell, sometimes it seems very fanatical, from the outside looking in). But then it matured beautifully, because of the length of the letter, a...

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Kevin V
00:10 Mar 30, 2023

Hi Éan. Wow, this is most certainly an apt submission for this prompt! I really expected it to be more humorous at first, since the 'fandom' seemed more fanatical. But what a bittersweet turn it took! Loss of a child, loss of a job, loss of a house, and then the realization that Drew was the rock, the answer, and not Chris Martin. So much her to like, Éan. Thank you for sharing.

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Marty B
16:15 Mar 28, 2023

What an emotional rollercoaster! First she sees Chris Martin as her lover, then friend, then sole companion through her heartache and loss. But he is not her sole companion, Drew is there every step of the way, truly just a roadie, ignored and dismissed by E.B. It goes deeper too, EB needs something more than her day to day life, something to make her feel special. Until, at her lowest point, she realizes that she already has that, inside herself. Hopefuly she can put some of that fandom to the one sleeping next to her. Although that is...

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Éan Bird
15:49 Apr 04, 2023

Thank you for taking the time to read! Your comment of Drew being "just a roadie" was an illuminating connection and goes to show how the reader, too, adds richness to one's writing. I appreciate you!

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Helen A Smith
09:18 Mar 27, 2023

It was great to enter into this world, Ean. It was powerful and moving and fluid. You portrayed so well the connection between ‘loving’ a public figure, interweaved with key moments. Beautifully written and something many will identify with. Also, you injected some light elements in how you involved the husband. This created a balance which I enjoyed. Well done.

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Helen A Smith
09:23 Mar 27, 2023

Sorry, writing on my phone. Not sure how to get the accent on your name.

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Éan Bird
14:33 Mar 28, 2023

Wow! Thank you, Helen. As reluctant (aka fearful) sharer of writing, your words are both encouraging and meaningful. And no worries, I rarely get the accent right, too!

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Kandi Zeller
02:45 Mar 27, 2023

Amazing use of the prompt!

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Éan Bird
14:28 Mar 28, 2023

Thank you, Kandi! This prompt spoke to me :)

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Mary Bendickson
05:52 Mar 24, 2023

You know I like this. And all your work.

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Éan Bird
21:03 Mar 25, 2023

Thank you, Mary! I hold this comment dear.

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Unknown User
02:29 Feb 29, 2024

<removed by user>

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Emma Clark
23:21 Apr 05, 2023

I think you shroud make it a little bit more scary.

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Brooklyn Lewellen
18:25 Apr 05, 2023

I dont really get the beginning, i do love the middle-end though!! good job

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