All Nonfiction
- Bullying
- Books
- Academic
- Author Interviews
- Celebrity interviews
- College Articles
- College Essays
- Educator of the Year
- Heroes
- Interviews
- Memoir
- Personal Experience
- Sports
- Travel & Culture
All Opinions
- Bullying
- Current Events / Politics
- Discrimination
- Drugs / Alcohol / Smoking
- Entertainment / Celebrities
- Environment
- Love / Relationships
- Movies / Music / TV
- Pop Culture / Trends
- School / College
- Social Issues / Civics
- Spirituality / Religion
- Sports / Hobbies
All Hot Topics
- Bullying
- Community Service
- Environment
- Health
- Letters to the Editor
- Pride & Prejudice
- What Matters
- Back
Summer Guide
- Program Links
- Program Reviews
- Back
College Guide
- College Links
- College Reviews
- College Essays
- College Articles
- Back
The Box
CONNOR
His face hovers over me,
His tears fall onto my body.
I hear his anguished cries,
I hear him scream my name.
I feel blood
oozing out of my body,
my head, my heart.
Sirens are wailing in the distance,
coming closer and closer.
I hear him cry out in relief
as paramedics try to fix
my mangled body.
I want to talk to him.
“It’s no use.”
I didn’t fall three stories
to be saved.
They say
you regret it
as you fall.
But I didn’t.
His voice swims in my ears,
his face in my fading thoughts.
I wish he wasn’t here,
I wish I was dead.
I tried so hard.
Why am I still here?
His arms unwrap from around me,
as they load me into the ambulance.
The box.
There are voices all around me,
but his is different than the rest.
Even as I am carried away,
I can still hear him
calling my name.
The doors to the ambulance close,
and I am in the box.
It is a box of sirens
a box of cries
a box of paramedics
a box of people trying to keep me alive.
I don’t want to be alive.
If I don’t die
in this box,
then I will make sure
that he does.
A YEAR LATER
ELLIOT
APRIL 16
A year ago,
on this day,
my best friend,
Connor,
jumped off the roof of our school
and fell
three stories down.
He was twelve years old.
I found him first.
His head met the concrete,
his eyes glassy and glazed,
And blood.
So
much
blood.
I did what I was used to.
When my mother jumped,
when my sister jumped.
My mother died,
my sister died.
I wouldn’t let Connor die,
so I called
the ambulance.
Connor never liked ambulances.
He told me so
when he broke his arm,
and we rode the ambulance together.
“I don’t like ambulances,”
He had said.
“They’re like boxes.”
Connor always called them boxes.
I saved Connors life,
by calling that ambulance.
but I put him in the box,
that he hated so much.
and I never knew why.
I never pushed.
Still,
I put him in the box.
And maybe that’s why
he doesn’t want
to see me
anymore.
APRIL 17
The day Connor woke up,
I was there.
I watched him
open his eyes
and the first thing he saw
was me.
I remember how
his eyes darkened.
I remember how
he screamed.
I remember how
I found myself
thrown out of the room
looking at his parents’
remorseful eyes.
“I don’t know why
he doesn’t want to see you,”
They said.
“I’m sorry, Elliot.”
I remember blinking away tears
until I was out of the hospital.
I walked back to school
locked the door to my dorm,
and cried.
When he was discharged,
he was sent to a school
closer to his house.
but not too far away
for me to come visit
every once in a while.
I went to his house once,
but his parents
shut the door on me.
“Stop trying, Elliot,”
They said,
“He doesn’t want to see you.”
I miss him
every day.
I wonder how
he’s doing now?
MAY 3
Today somebody died.
he was in my grade,
Tommy Mitchell.
He was found in the school bathroom,
stabbed.
He died in the ambulance.
MAY 4
Someone else in my grade died.
It was a girl,
Charlotte Blake.
She was found in her dorm room,
unconscious.
She was poisoned.
She died in the ambulance.
MAY 5
The third kill was today.
A boy.
Shot in the stomach.
Died in the ambulance.
MAY 6
Girl.
Hit by a car.
Died in the ambulance.
MAY 7
Every day
someone in our grade is killed.
MAY 8
And every day,
they die
in the ambulance.
MAY 9
I can’t help but think,
Connor?
JUNE 13
School’s out
but they keep dying
in the ambulance.
In the box.
AUGUST 9
Everyone in my grade
is dead
except me.
I know
it’s Connor.
And I know
tomorrow
is my turn.
AUGUST 10
I go to my dorm today,
to move back into it
for the school year.
there is a note
on my desk.
1 a.m.
Lockton Gym.
It’s your turn.
AUGUST 11
1 A.M.
School is empty
at one in the morning.
I know I shouldn’t be here.
I should’ve ignored the note.
But I haven’t seen
Connor
in months.
I open the doors
to the gym,
preparing
for my death.
The room is lit
like it is during P.E.
It doesn’t look like
someone is about to die.
There is a figure at the end
of the room.
I know
that it’s him.
As I walk
towards him,
I notice his features.
brown eyes,
heavy and sunken
bags of black and blue
weighing them down.
His hair
once long and golden
cut short
and dyed black.
His face looks hollow
like it might collapse.
He looks
dead.
Like he was never
saved at all.
Like I never
called the ambulance.
The box.
I shudder.
He sees me
and his broken face
stretches
into a smile.
A grin
of pure evil.
And then
I knew.
Connor was saved,
but my best friend
died.
“Elliot,”
Connor says to me
as I approach.
“It’s been
such a long time.”
The tears
that I’ve been holding in
since the day Connor fell
are set free.
“You were always
such a coward,”
Connor laughs,
upon seeing my tears.
“Such a
crybaby.”
I wipe my tears
and look up at him.
he was always
taller than me.
I have only one question
for the boy in front of me
pretending to be
my best friend.
“Why?”
Connor steps forward.
I step back.
“Because,”
He says,
“You saved me.
I didn’t fall
three stories
to be saved.”
He steps forward.
I step back.
“You know
my mother died,”
I say.
“You know
my sister died.
I couldn’t let you
die too.”
He steps forward.
I step back.
“That’s not
for you
to decide,”
He replies.
A step forward.
A step back.
“How could
you jump?
how could
you leave me?”
Forward.
Back.
“There’s nothing
here for me.
we live
to die.
So I
did the dying
early.”
Forward.
Back.
My foot
hits something.
Probably
some equipment.
Without looking,
I step over it.
My foot hits something
that is not
the gym floor.
Wood.
“They say
you regret it
as you fall,”
Connor says,
“But I didn’t.”
I look down
at my feet.
They stand on wood.
Walls around me.
I am in
a box.
A box
just big enough to fit me
like a coffin.
There are wheels
on the bottom.
No holes,
no way to breathe.
And it is
painted
to look like
an ambulance.
I look at Connor
with frightened eyes.
“Why?”
“You called
the box.
You shoved me
in the box.
and now I
will trap you
in the box.”
I am too
scared
to move.
Too scared
to step
out of the box.
Too scared
to run.
Connor’s words
stick in my head.
We live
to die.
And now
I know
why Connor hates
ambulances.
He hated
ambulances,
hospitals,
doctors.
Anything
that saved
your life.
We live
to die.
I just did
the dying
early.
Before
I can speak,
something
-someone-
pushes me
down.
I feel myself
fall
my body
matching the shape
of the box.
I hear
a lid
shut over me.
“Goodbye,
Elliot,”
Connor says.
I hear him laugh,
slowly
going
insane.
Goodbye,
Connor.
It is dark
inside the box.
It is dark
inside my mind.
Only now
do I struggle
as I lose air
as I lose my life.
I kick
and scream
but it’s a waste
of precious oxygen
and time.
Before I succumb
to death,
I try
one last thing
to save
my life.
My eyes close
as I drift away.
The last thing I hear
before I am
suffocated
by the box:
sirens.
CONNOR
Sirens.
Sirens fill my mind.
I open my mouth
to let the words out.
“WEEEEEE-OOOOOOO,
WEEEEEE-OOOOOOOO!”
I am running
my feet flying
from underneath me.
I am flying.
I am flying high.
High to the sky.
High to the sky as I die.
The ambulance-box
is in my hands.
I am pushing it around
round and around and around…
I hear
siren songs
and I
am screaming them.
He is screaming too.
I cackle as I hear him cry.
He is going
to die.
“Don’t cry,” I tell him.
“Soon, you’ll die.”
But the words
never leave my mouth.
Or do they?
I don’t know.
I can’t remember.
He is suffocating
in the box.
The box that saves lives.
I have taken
so many lives
inside the box.
He is
the last one.
my grand finale.
And now
the box has stopped.
I am panting,
and in the box
there is silence.
He finally gave in
to the sirens.
Now,
I am moving.
My arms are moving.
What am I doing?
Oh, there’s more
to my plan.
Gasoline.
Matches.
Fire.
The gym
is on fire.
The school
is on fire.
The box
is on fire.
He
is on fire.
I
am on fire.
Finally
I am free.
I sit
on top
of the ambulance.
The box.
And I
burn.
I can hear
sirens.
He must have called them
to try and save
his life.
It’s too late.
I tell him.
I can hear it coming
closer and closer
to try and save
our lives.
But we’re
already
dead.
The last thing I hear
before I succumb
to the flames:
The siren song
the ambulance
the box.
Similar Articles
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 0 comments.
Manisha M\ is a freshman in the Creative Writing program in Marin School of the Arts at Novato High. She enjoys writing fiction in the forms of short stories and novels. In her free time, she likes reading, singing, playing the piano, and, of course, writing.
This piece is called "The Box." It is a horror piece about a boy named Connor, who attempts suicide, his best friend, Elliot, who saves him, and the horror that comes after.