Damaged

Damaged

A Story by TJ
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A look at the world through damaged eyes. Flash Fiction

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Damaged

 

 

She couldn’t see it, but I could. Sitting from my perch, monotonously dragging items across the infrared rays, I saw a lot of things others could not. Maybe it was the vantage point, or maybe my life had just better taught me how to look.

It wasn’t that he was a villain or some kind of predator, no; however, she was very much like prey. He was a young twenty-something, pushing around half a cart of groceries, just trying to find the quickest way out of the store and back home (what young man wants to be stuck in the grocery store one second longer than necessary?). It could’ve have been pure coincidence, he could’ve just innocently wandered into her line; but why? There were quicker lines on either side of her, so why her line? Some part of me couldn’t help but think he’d done it intentionally, just to get closer to her, but that was some old, paranoid part; a part I’ve been trying to get past, but can’t seem to. My logical half saw it was clear he entered the line with no ulterior motives, after all, the people checking out were the only people in the line; he even seemed to scan around the store for another line when he noticed the overflowing buggy in front of him, but in the end he decided he was content to wait. Still…

He was a good looking guy, a young guy, and she clearly noticed. She shot him nervous glance after bashful look, but he seemed oblivious to anything not having to do with the speed of the items moving across the scanner.

Grandma, though, was not.

She had seen her granddaughter sneaking shy glances at the handsome young man behind her, and thought this as good time as any to play matchmaker. The fact that her granddaughter was, by my guess, no older than fifteen, and the young man behind her was no younger than twenty-two, seemed to register no issue with her. She wasn’t one of those twenty-nine year old grandmothers; she was a real grandma, in her day that kind of age gap was no issue; common even. It did surprise me, though, that an old-fashioned woman like herself would approve of this type of relationship, one that would’ve never happened when she was a teenager, not publicly anyway. I could only guess that Grandma’s pickiness, or assertiveness, had led to a matchmaking failure in the past and she was willing to make an exception this time around if it avoided that outcome. Any man was better than no man " a life she refused to see another one of her kin go through " and he seemed good enough.

And he was. As I said, he wasn’t a predator or anything like that; to his eyes this was a beautiful young woman of seventeen or eighteen, clearly interested, a little shy, using her grandmother as a proxy flirt to ensure she didn’t say anything she’d be embarrassed about later. And from the shy, flirtatious looks she kept sending his way, he was becoming more and more confident he’d get in her pants. Nothing wrong with that type of thinking from a young man, it’s expected. That singular goal guides most men through every decision they make from twelve to thirty-five;  it was certainly what was motivating him to have this friendly conversation with Grandma.

To them it all seemed innocent enough, but I knew I’d been there before: looking like a grown woman at fourteen; being awestruck by the so cool, so handsome older guy willing to give me the time of day; feeling so cool as I brag to all my friends back at school that I am dating a college guy and he loves me. I knew exactly where this went.

She’d give him a piece of herself she can only give once, and never get back, and with that would go her whole heart. And as his masculine presence filled the empty void in her she didn’t even realize was there, she’d begin confusing feelings of false security, and infatuation with love. How long would it take for that love to turn into submission; a willingness to do anything, to swallow whatever pride she has, to tolerate any action, so long as he doesn’t leave her.

And what would the poison that is control do to him? How long, after he realized he had complete power over her heart, would it take for things to go sour, for him to stop playing the nice guy because it was no longer necessary. How many years would she endure? How many plans would she alter for the sake of their toxic relationship? How many dreams killed? When would he hit her for the first time? When would he start berating her every single day? When would he completely crush all of her self-worth and dominate her entire existence? How long after that until he crushes the last of her spirit, turning this beautiful, vibrant, adorably bashful girl into a shell, incapable of love and trust?

“Sir, I’m open. You can come to my line.”

Never.

© 2011 TJ


Author's Note

TJ
Inspiration for this story: I was in walmart in a long line. I thought I saw a freind of my younger sister in front of me. I was looking hard trying to see if it was her or not and then, a cashier invited me to her line which was JUST AS LONG as the line I'd just left. I began to wonder why she'd invited me there and this is what I came up with!

My Review

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Featured Review

This was awesome. A well organized, interesting piece that crescendoed to the very end. I love your writing style; I'll be sure to read even more of your work. Great, original story here, with fascinating, thought-provoking concepts. Very well done.

I need to add, also, something I noticed. The whole scenario that the cashier creates in her head is entirely hypothetical... it's not even guaranteed to happen. But she treats it as if it's inevitable unless she does something to stop it, which goes to show how much her experience has damaged her. It makes the character very real somehow. Splendid development there. A pristine short story.

Posted 13 Years Ago


3 of 3 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

This is awsome! A vibrant and vivid story. You explore both observed characters so well, and predict their future together with the authority of someone who has seen it before. By doing so, you bring the observer to life as well, showing a hint of how damaged she has been by the scenario she sees playing out.
Excellent work!

Posted 13 Years Ago


Reads like a good synopsis opening for a longer story

Posted 13 Years Ago


Blimey! An ordinary shopping trip will never be the same! lol This is awesome! Well told and builds up nicely.....excellent! There is a lot of depth to this too......really enjoyed love! A fav! xx

Posted 13 Years Ago


nice story..

Posted 13 Years Ago


Nice flow in this well-written piece. You have a talent for description and character development that will continue to blossom until it is even compelling to men over 35. I'm teasing. This fits your audience. Well done.

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

nice job

Posted 13 Years Ago


"or maybe my life had just better taught me how to look." - Rearrange this sentence.

A few technical glitches--specifically, the WC quotation one.

I thoroughly enjoyed this! No, seriously, I thought the ending was ingenious, perfect. For the shortness of the piece, it still managed the appropriate organization needed to accomplish the "twitch at one's spine" ending.

I once worked at Wal-Mart. One who watches (really watches) will shortly notice how realistic and true this is; more often than not, men will get in line behind the attractive women.

Great, short piece.

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

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EMF
Nice and cynical. Who does it speak more about the observer, or observed. I like the slow shift from hum-drum to near paraoia. The only thing I would sugesst is breaking up the paragraphs a little more. It may give it a little more punch.

Posted 13 Years Ago


I really like the way you turn an ordinary, ho-hum day at the grocery store into a deep story. Inspiration comes from the weirdest places, and I've found that a lot of the stories that were conceived in the strangest ways are my favorites because of their back-stories.

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.


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Stats

1808 Views
59 Reviews
Rating
Shelved in 5 Libraries
Added on May 8, 2011
Last Updated on May 9, 2011
Tags: Flash Fiction, Women, Abuse, Damaged

Author

TJ
TJ

Virginia Beach, VA



About
My name is TJ and I'm still just your typical aspiring author :) Follow me on twitter @tj_coles And for some short stories in 140 characters or less follow @timmystales more..

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