Contributor: Anant Hariharan    
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I'm an avid sixteen-year old writer who writes novels, short stories, and poetry. I'm currently attempting to enjoy my final years of high school. 
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The  only noise that filtered through the gently shimmering mist of  snowflakes was the throbbing beat of dark, pristinely laced shoes  against the sidewalk. 
You can do this, Will-
The  teenager twisted his head towards the nearest house; the blaze of  luminescence emanating from the dwelling surpassed the pitiful glow of  all the streetlights that adorned the narrow road. It was flanked by an  array of vehicles that included a five-wheeled motorbike acrimoniously  letting out slow, grating rumbles, as well as an exhibition of sports  cars and a single mini blissfully parked several meters away from the  rest of its loud-mouthed relatives.
-Just go over there and say hi.
Will  took two quivering steps; past two boys slumped against a patch of  broken shrubbery like beaten scarecrows, their sweaty arms fastened  tightly around each other’s necks. 
Up  the six creaky steps and the moth-eaten wooden railing; onto the panels  that wove bent lines of darkness through the oak flooring. 
Three  knocks on the hard door; two confident, the last one uncertain. Feeling  the pulse of the music that wove through the house depart his body as  he withdrew his palm from the doorknob, Will stood apprehensively, his  arms pressed to his sides. 
The  wall of wood swung open to reveal a sweaty-faced, handsome teenager  sporting a leather jacket and a mildly annoyed expression.
“Hi, Benjamin!” Will burst out, a little over-enthusiastically.
A  strand of hair plastered to the boy’s forehead broke free of its  restraints and sprung into the dry night air. He looked Will up and  down, his eyes hovering over the other boy’s raised shoulders and  faintly quivering legs. 
He shook his head from side to side with just the barest hint of condescension. 
“Sorry,  kid. The party’s winding down already-” He began, a burst of electronic  music and an accompanying chorus of yells drowning out the rest of his  sentence. 
“I mean, um-” He rubbed the back of his head embarrassedly. 
“Look,  there’re plenty of good places to be tonight, y’know?” He said, smiling  sheepishly at Will and taking a slight step backwards.
“Wait,  Benjamin. I’m Will, remember? We were friends in grade nine!” Will  burst out desperately, flicking away the hood that obscured his weedy  brown hair.
“-and grade eight and seven, and, um, six and five...” He added awkwardly, his hands flopping uselessly at his sides.
Benjamin raised his eyebrows. 
“Of course. You’re...Will?” He asked, not troubling to keep the surprise out of his voice. 
“Yeah.  Maybe we could talk or something... in there?” Will asked, jerking his  head towards the doorway blocked by the other boy’s large frame. 
Benjamin looked at Will confusedly, as if unsure of what to do. Then he smiled.
“It’s  been, I don’t know, nearly a year since-” He began, as a girl emerged  from inside the house into the constricted space. Leaning against  Benjamin, she draped her arms across the boy’s shoulders and flipped a  long curtain of smooth golden hair back down her neck.
“Hey, Ben.” She purred into his ear.
“What’s going on?” She paused, looking at Will.
“And who’s this midget?” She added.
“Um, I’m Will. Hi.” He said confidently, thrusting his hand forwards and gallantly ignoring the jibe.
The  girl shrugged her shoulders and turned away, drawing both boys’ glances  until she had faded into the murky fumes of club music that seemed to  tantalizingly swirl a few meters past the doorway.
Benjamin blinked twice. 
“Yeah,  well, Will. It was cool to see you again, yeah? I’ll keep an eye out  for you, then.” Benjamin said, turning around with an unconcerned  expression on his face.
“Uh-hey, wai-!”
The door slammed shut with a menacing growl of wood. 
***
Will  raised the glass to his lips and drank deeply; the liquid seared his  throat, making him cough a little. As vile as it was, Will couldn’t  quite shake off the feeling that the world seemed to make more sense  when seen through the warped exterior of the glass.
“Tough break, huh?” Came a sympathetic voice to his right. Will ceased staring through his glass. 
A  short, middle-aged man behind the counter was looking at him.  Single-handedly cleaning a glass with a ragged cloth, he held Will’s  gaze. 
“...Yeah.” Will said morosely, holding the now empty glass upside-down by its handle. 
“Wanna talk about it, kid?” 
“No. It’s just-”
The barman gently put his glass down, turning both his eyes on the boy.
“I  guess I didn’t realize how much people change.” Will blurted out, his  voice so squeaky one might think the man had just scrubbed it clean.
“One  day they’re your friend, and when you come back after a year- they’re,  bigger, and d-d-.” The words seemed to drain out of his mouth.
“Different?” The man supplied, looking at Will knowingly. 
“Yeh.” Will put in. 
The barman let out a short sigh. 
“Don’t worry about it, kid. If it’s any consolation, things’ll get better. They always do.”
Will glared hazily at the barman through a fog of frustration.
“What do you know?”
The barman let out a grating, harsh laugh. 
“What do I know, he asks.” He muttered in a dark undertone. 
“Hey!” The man let out a hoarse yell.
In an instant, silence rippled through the space as heads twisted towards the source of the noise.
“How many of you guys’ve been right where the kid is now?” The barman asked, pointing at Will. 
Around  the boy, a host of hands burst into the air; hands clutching beer mugs,  hands stained with grime, and hands balled into fists so tight that  thin bones seemed ready to burst out of their skin. Wads of crinkled  playing cards and empty cigarette lighters clattered to the floor as  nearly everyone in the bar thrust their palms into the heady air.
Will  was transfixed by the worn figures now looking expressionlessly back at  him; their tired hands seemed to beckon him over to them.
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I'm an avid sixteen-year old writer who writes novels, short stories, and poetry. I'm currently attempting to enjoy my final years of high school.
 
Author:
          
Anant Hariharan























Enjoyed reading the story. Heartfelt and well written.