The Warmth of Ice CreamA Story by KendralokaiDo you ever wish that pain wasn't apparent to you? Do you ever wish you could ignore it as easily as buying an ice cream cone? Harden Rose Vardell is a girl who has never looked pain in the face.The Warmth of Ice Cream By Kendra Sammons Do you know that
feeling you get right after something terrible happens? The feeling you get
before you crumble to your knees and slam your fists into the ground. The ever
so present rock that might as well be a terrestrial planet buried deep inside
your throat. The moment that causes the unintentional quiver of your bottom
lip. The darkness that cascades over your entire body until you're composed of
it. Well, in my life of tears and tissues I've managed to avoid that feeling in
a quite effective, yet tragic manner. On
December 14th, 1991, I was sitting on my mother's favorite green
dusty couch, next to my Little brother, Kol. We were watching
some cloudy cartoon that Kol had chosen. My eyes began to glaze over as the
colorful show danced on. And just when my deepest sleep began to drag my
eyelids over my green oak eyes, I was jolted awake by the loud, synchronized
noise of the slam of a door, and a loud sob. My mother rushed to the couch
where Kol and I were sitting, and I could see through her broken mascara and
cemented eyebrows, laid a distraught women. “Mom,
w-what is wrong?” I asked her through clattered teeth. She looked at me and
whispered my name without moving her lips. “Harden...”
She then called for my older brother and sister, collecting us all onto the
couch as she stood over us. Through ocean-sunk eyes and a sidewalk cracked
voice, she told us, “Kids...Your...your
father was in a terrible accident...” That was when my vision started to blur.
I saw the shape of my sister fall to the floor, and the outline of my older
brother's fist hit the wall. And when my sight was nothing but darkness, I ran.
I ran, without stopping might I add, all the way to Mr. Conwell's Creamy Ice
Cream Parlor. I opened the door and walked straight to the cashier. I ordered a
vanilla cone with rainbow sprinkles, my father's favorite. I ate that frozen
treat until my hand was holding the cold, stiff air. As I stared at my empty
hand, I couldn't catch my breath. This is when I started crying. Crying so
hard, they had to call an ambulance. I
was thirteen years old when my father was killed by a faceless man in a
semi-truck. I was thirteen years old when I lost the left corner of my heart. At
seventeen years old, I was proud to be Harden Vardell. Completely and utterly
original. Every day, I would pass by my father's picture that hung in the
living room, right above the dusty green couch. I would look at my dad's face,
and I would see myself. I saw my light hair that no one could ever distinguish
as blonde or brown. I saw my crooked jaw and full crimson bow lips. Whenever I
looked above that ugly green couch, I saw my dad, then I'd turned my head, and
he'd be gone. In the year of 1995, my paperback friends convinced me to enter
my high school's annual art contest. Besides listening to Cobain and chucking
flannels over my thin shoulders, drawing was what I enjoyed the most. Weeks I
spent on that piece of art, weeks I spent stabbing my pencil onto the blank
canvas until I created the perfect portrayal of my father. And when I was
finally finished, I placed the portrait on the kitchen table, and ran to the
yellow bus stop for school. In class, I bragged and bragged about my artwork,
and how it would for sure take first place. But when I got home, my picture
wasn't on the kitchen table. I searched and searched for my creation until my
mother arrived home. I sighed and asked her, “Mom,
have you seen my drawing of dad? You know the one I'm entering in the contest
for school.” “Oh,
baby girl, I am so sorry. Your little brother got a hold of it and drew over
the whole thing, completely ruining it. I threw it away, sorry love.” and with
that she walked away as if she had just told me what we were having for dinner.
She walked away with my bloody heart pulsing in her palms. She walked away, and
that was that. However, I did not shout, I did not cry, but I drove all the way
to Mr. Conwell's Creamy Ice Cream Parlor and ordered two scoops of rocky road. By
the time I was twenty four years old, I was quite the accomplished artist,
peacefully residing in the magical city of New Orleans. They told me I was
extra special because I became successful at such a young age. I never thought
age mattered as long as your talent was strong enough, but I wasn't
complaining. Life was good, and I had long thrown away the vague memories of Fincastle, Virginia and began
creating new ones in New Orleans. The environment was very extraordinary to me.
I moved in with my best friend Theo, and we tore through the city. Theo, a
talented young saxophonist, was always so vibrant and full of life. He was a
great man, and I believe he never stopped being great for even a second in
time. Unfortunately,
Theo was involved in a terrible snowboarding accident. He shattered a couple of
bones in his wrist, ceasing his sax playing. I still remember our last
conversation and it haunts me every day. Theo
was sitting on our purple arm chair with a journal in his lap and a hanging
head. He wrote so fast that I could hear the pen engraving its ink into the
poor innocent paper. I remember staring at him, wondering where the magnificent
man who carried girls on his back and wore old torn up baseball caps on his
head disappeared to. The man that was obsessed with Christmas Stockings and
insisted on hanging them every holiday. Theo crumbled the paper he was working
on, threw it in the trash, and dragged his body to his room. The curiosity was burning through me, I had
to see what was on that paper. I reached into the gray bin and unrumpled the
mysterious note. In clean print, it read: I
hope, that up in the skies, the stars form a picture. I hope they are not just
scattered into meaningless patterns. I hope, there is one thing, tangible or
not, one thing that has control. I don’t want my life to be the sad effect to a
tragic cause. But I cannot fight these demons living so casually in my heart. I
hope that the lives of us all are sitting amongst the stars, ready to explode,
to turn into a supernova, to burn out. I
hope to god, I hope to the universe, I hope to whatever is out there. I hope
that our lives and thoughts and minds and bodies are being carefully played by
wise old gray-haired women in a game of chess. Not in the hands of careless
children, placing the pawn where the queen should be. After
reading this letter a thousand times, I imagined what I would say to him. “Theo, you do know that the
saxophone wasn't the only thing that defined you, right? You have a nose but you
are not a nose. You have fingernails, but you are not a fingernail. It pains me
to see you dying over something that was only a part of you. It kills me to see
the black and blue bags under your eyes and the bloody scabs sprinkled across
your knuckles. So you know what buddy? We're going to conquer these demons
together. I am not going to let you think that losing one amazing thing about
yourself drains every other amazing attribute you have. I will not let you be
another hole in the ground. Theo, I love you, let me help.” And after my
epic monologue, he would say to me, “Harden Rose, let's put the pieces back
together.” But when I saw
him sobbing into his pillow, I froze, and walked away. I walked away from my
suicidal best friend because I didn't know what the f**k else to do. I walked
away because there was no part of me that knew how to deal with pain. I walked
away from him, and the final image he had of me was the back of my neck. A
week later, I found Theo, hanging like a Christmas stocking, in his room. I did
not cry, I did not yell. I took a plane back to Fincastle and drove to Mr.
Conwell's Creamy Ice Cream Parlor and ordered a hot fudge sundae. In
the summer of my 32nd year, I found a consistent strand of
happiness. I had a comfortable career, a happy guard dog, and an apartment that
fit me like a glove. Theo had long disintegrated from my everyday thoughts, and
the memories that we made went with him. It wasn't until the following spring
pain sunk its fangs into my neck. I'd began losing weight and I had terrible
fatigue and frequent fevers. I remember ignoring all the symptoms, denying I
was sick until the day my secretary found me in my office, covered in my own
vomit. I
remember the time so clearly, so vividly. I was sitting at my desk, skimming
through some boring work papers when a cough struck my chest. Then that cough
turned into a gasp, and that gasp turned into gag, and that gag turned me into
a beggar. On my knees with my hair in my face, shouting to god, shouting to the
universe, shouting to whatever was out there. I screamed, in between vomiting,
at nothing, and that's how Margo found me. That
day, I was diagnosed with Leukemia, and my mouth mimicked the dry Sahara. Although,
I did not shout, I did not cry, but I took a plane all the way to Fincastle,
and drove to Mr. Conwell's Creamy Ice Cream Parlor. As I parked my car in the
familiar drive way, my eyes were met with a bank, not the parlor. I
opened the doors that were once painted red and white, only to find dull gray
floors and chairs filled with dull gray people. Tentatively, I made my way to
the bank teller. “Hello,
can I get a plane vanilla ice cream cone with rainbow sprinkles? It was my
father's favorite.” I told her with a polite smile on my face. She looked
confused and said to me, “Um,
Ma'am? This is a bank, not an...ice cream shop. Would you like to make a
deposit or...?” I remember the utter denial running
through my veins, to my head, as if my blood was trying to tell my mistaken
mouth the truth. I
threw my fist into the nearby wall and screamed. “I
need to speak to your manager, miss. Where the F**K is Mr. Conwell?! Where is
that red and white striped door and where's all the happy f*****g people eating
their happy little ice cream cones?! Where is my happiness, miss? Where did it
all go?!” I cried and screamed and fell to the ground. My hands flew to my head
and sealed my ears. I didn't want to hear it, I didn't want to hear the world.
This is when I understood Theo's pain. This is when I fully felt my own pain for
the first time in my life. It was like all the knives I managed to dodge came
attacking my skin all at the same time. All I remember after that was crying.
Crying so hard, they had to call an ambulance. A
year after I was diagnosed, I was forced to lie peacefully on my death bed. I
could barely move without shots of pain going through my body. The hospital I
was in simply made me sad. The windows captured pictures of Virginia, when I
longed to be in New Orleans. My mother had forced me to stay with her, saying
we, “didn't have much time together.” To her, I was dead before they even stuck
an IV in my arm. On
the days that I thought were going to be my last, I slept and slept, wondering
if my eyes would shut for the final time. On one of the disappointing days
where I actually woke up, I remember, through foggy vision, seeing the tears of
my mother as she grasped my hand, and my littlest brother Kol sitting in the
nearby chair, with a bowl of raspberry ice cream. ___________________________________________________________________________________ Today,
I am at my “I survived cancer party.” But it doesn't feel like I survived
anything. A year ago, I was at the mercy of my disease, bowing down to any
command it had. I am not alive because I fought so hard during my battle. I am
alive simply for the fact that my sickness let me live. This
party, held at my childhood home, is filled with pastel yellow and pink
decorations, banners and candles. This party is filled with people who are
proud of me and people who thought they'd never get to see me again. This party
is filled with my doctors and nurses, my band-aides and scars. This party is
filled to the brim with relief, and I am drowning with my friends and family
mindlessly watching. But,
although I cry every night for my father, for my Theo, for my comfort, I can
feel a curtain of relief drape over my shoulders. My mother turns to me with a bright
smile on her face and says, “Oh,
Harden Rose Vardell, my sweet, sweet baby. I am so thankful I had to buy a “Beat
Cancer” banner.” I laughed at her comment that was so very her. “Mom,
do you really think I'd leave you all alone with no one but my childish
siblings?” I smiled and glanced at my littlelest brother Kol, talking some girl
up in the kitchen. She shook her head and chuckled. “You
know Harden, your father would be so proud of you right now.” I looked at her
and thought immediately, why this? My father wouldn't care about my artwork or
successful business but he would be proud of me not dying? Do you know how much
effort it takes to not die when you’re already dying? None, zero, nada. When
your hole has been dug that deep, it isn't your hands and legs that fight their
way up to the light. What gets the sunshine back on your face isn't yourself.
It isn't anything really. I guess its luck, and I guess I'm pretty damn lucky.
I don't say any of this to my mother. I only raise my head up and bite my lip. “I
love you mom.” The women that raised me looks at me with ocean-deep eyes and a
side walk-smooth voice and says, “I
love you too, Harden.” I walk away from my mother and make my way
into the kitchen. A tap on my shoulder turns my body around to an unfamiliar
face. It's a man with eyes that look like a diamond being struck by sunshine
and tousled light hair. He looks at me and smiles this impossibly perfect smile
before saying, “Harden
right? I'm Dr. Ulrich's son, and I just thought I'd introduce myself.” He tells
me his name and his eyes bounce just like Theo's use to. After hours of
splendidly meaningless conversation, we make our way to the table filled with
food. “Do
you want ice cream, cake, or both?” I stare at the coldest dessert lying in its
carton. Pictures of Theo flash through my head. The pain
wrenches at my heart and twists my insides. I shake my head and stare at the
new man in front of me. I look at my options and say, “I'll
just have the cake.” © 2015 KendralokaiAuthor's Note
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Added on January 26, 2015 Last Updated on January 26, 2015 Tags: short story, trauma, traumatic events, ice cream, young adult, quotable, teen, pain AuthorKendralokaiBeaumont, CAAboutI'm a 16 year old student who likes to write. That seems like the only relevant information right now. haaaa more..Writing
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