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Say No More
MS. GREENE -mother of killer
 We all think we know our children 
 Like the back of our own hands, 
 Until they drift away 
 And we don’t even realize it. 
 We wonder where that sweet innocent child 
 Went 
 And if they’re ever coming back. 
 I thought I knew my only son Blake, 
 The son who I brought home from the hospital 
 Weighing six pounds and three ounces, 
 The son who got cuts and bruises from playing too rough 
 With his father, or falling off the monkey bars 
 During recess at school. 
 The son who never did I bad thing in his life, ever. 
 He was like this perfect little angel 
 That all the other mothers on the parents committee wanted 
 For their own, this little green eyed cutie 
 Incapable of doing anything wrong. 
 But somehow, over the years, he hid 
 His real self from me, 
 From the world. 
 Until one day no one could help him, 
 not even me 
 The person who brought him 
 Into it. 
 
 FRANCINE CARTER-honor student 
 High school’s supposed to be like this really big 
 Reality check. 
 You have to go from adolescence to an adult 
 In four years flat, and I 
 Guess if you think about it 
 It makes perfect sense. 
 So when we’re on our own in the world, we’re these 
 Miniature replicas of adults, in a way. 
 But the day Blake Greene came to school , 
 with guns in his backpack saying he was 
 Going to shoot everybody, that was too much of a reality check. 
 Kids were screaming warning anybody who’d listen that 
 There was this crazy dude shooting everybody, just blowing their 
 Brains out. 
 People in the cafeteria ran towards the double doors 
 On the opposite side where Blake Greene 
 Would most likely come in from, packed together like 
 Sardines in can, deprived of oxygen. 
 Some girl at the back of the crowd started screaming, saying 
 The shooter was in the cafeteria with a gun in his hand, more bodies 
 Pressing together, less oxygen, 
 I couldn’t breathe. 
 That’s when I heard the shots. 
 They rung through the cafeteria like 
 Marbles hitting a tile floor, loud and clear. 
 More screaming, crying, screaming again. 
 Looking back on it, the screams 
 Were the only thing that clarified my sanity, 
 I knew I wasn’t the only one who 
 Was seeing their life flash before them, wondering if 
 They’d be able to see their parents, or 
 Even lay in their own bed again. 
 The shots did everything but cease, hands entangled with bodies, 
 Faces twisted, eyes petrified 
 I knew I shouldn’t turn around, or couldn’t, just 
 Pushed my way through hot bodies, feet without shoes, to the head 
 Of the crowd, praying a bullet 
 Didn’t go flying in my back, ending my life 
 My fight to survive. 
 You could say sheer willpower brought 
 Me through 
 But that would be an understatement, 
 Something higher wanted me to 
 Survive, to bear witness. 
 I just felt it as I found my way to the 
 Front of the school, tears mixed with mascara 
 Running down my face, hot and sticky, but 
 Nonetheless welcoming. 
 
 BLAKE GREENE -killer
 I was sick and tired of 
 Being the center of the laughing, the teasing 
 All through grade school I never 
 Really fit in, never would. 
 I remember sitting in the back of 
 The class one day staring out the window 
 At nothing really, when I see this mockingbird nest. 
 There were five birds, but my eyes rested on 
 That one bird, left wing deformed, isolated 
 To a corner by itself 
 Four other birds stood on 
 The opposite corner of the nest, 
 Chirping, laughing in bird gibberish. 
 It reminded me of the torture and hate 
 I faced on a daily basis, only different, 
 The same but different. 
 I walked around school that day, thinking about that 
 Mockingbird. 
 I was that deformed bird. 
 And that needed to change.
 
 CHRIS REID-jock 
 You never really comprehend 
 The intensity of a situation until 
 There’s a loaded gun being pointed in your 
 Face 
 Brings you to reality pretty quick, you know 
 There I was, looking inside 
 The barrel of a gun 
 While Blake held the pistol to my head, 
 Pure hatred in his eyes, his eyes so close 
 I could see the grey specks inside the green irises, 
 The jealousy evident. 
 I’d already knew the minute I heard that Blake Greene 
 Brought a gun to school shooting people 
 that I knew he was coming for me, 
 Sooner or later he was coming 
 Unfortunately, it was sooner than I wanted. 
 I was the cause of his pain, his suffering 
 Having to come to school everyday, suffer some more 
 Do it all over again the next day. 
 Being a hundred percent sure 
 He wanted to pull that trigger 
 As much as I wanted to bolt out 
 Of the nearest door. 
 Yeah, not happening. 
 There was a high chance I wouldn’t 
 Make it out of here, much less alive 
 My eyes pleaded with him, I 
 Couldn’t die now, not today 
 I had a basketball scholarship, 
 I wanted to go to graduation, college 
 I realized none of these might happen
 I started crying. 
 But Blake was unfazed, just looked at me 
 And said, “This is for making my life 
 A living hell,” 
 I heard the gun go off.
 At first I didn’t feel anything, thinking maybe 
 He decided against shooting me, but then I 
 felt a sharp hit and my body 
 Going into this mega shock, eyes closing 
 Taking my last scene in. 
 I didn’t know if I was dead or alive, but as 
 My breath shortened, quickened, I knew 
 What it all came to. 
 I was dying. 
 But to Blake I was already dead, just another 
 Tormentor gone, as he walked out of the room, 
 But not without 
 Looking back at me, waiting for my eyes 
 to close, then walked out the gymnasium doors, not 
 Fazed one bit. 
 
 ANGELA PATTERSON -killer’s childhood friend
 I knew Blake, I mean 
 I really knew him, not from 
 Just going to school with him but 
 Talking, listening to him. 
 We grew up across the street from each other.
 Moms started talking and the rest is sweet history.
 But what he said to me a 
 Couple of months ago 
 Scared the crap out of me. 
 That’s pretty hard to do you know, scare 
 Me I mean 
 People think that me being a Goth 
 I worship Satan and wear black 
 all the time, but that’s just stereotype. 
 My dyed raven black hair looked like 
 Strands of licorices sticks, but 
 Mostly I was just misunderstood. 
 Only one person stopped and looked 
 On the inside, and 
 that was Blake. 
 It’s like the way you looked on the outside didn’t 
 Even matter, he just looked deeper, 
 Into your heart, your feelings. 
 You could have had a face full of pimples or 
 Two different colored eyes and he’d 
 Still would have had a serious conversation 
 With you. 
 Made you feel kind of special in a way.
 Blake and I usually had serious, in depths talks 
 But his always seemed somewhat, divergent 
 It was mostly how he got teased and how much pain 
 It brought him 
 I’ll admit that ninety-nine percent of the things 
 he told me 
 Were beyond disturbing, beyond even 
 Wanting to think about, we were 
 Sitting in the grass by the courtyard once 
 And he looked away like maybe he was 
 Daydreaming or doing some serious 
 Thinking. 
 I asked him what was up and he admitted to trying to 
 Kill himself 
 The night before, but he couldn’t do it 
 The thing that kept me up every night for months 
 Was when he told me 
 He wanted to spread the same 
 Pain that those sorry ass “Poppy people” inflicted 
 On him. 
 Poppy people’s a term me and Blake made up 
 To describe the Populars, 
 Including preps, jocks, 
 And even the occasional drama geek. 
 I remember asking him how he was 
 Going to do that, but he 
 Just went back into that dazed look, 
 Planning something evil, 
 But God, this was the farthest thing 
 From my mind. 
 I never in a million years would have thought
 That he’d actually do it.
 
 Blake Green
 I tried killing myself last night,
 Waited for mom to close her bedroom door and dad 
 to drift off on the living room sofa.
 I took the razor blade off mom’s old disposal chic razor
 I found in the trash out back.
 Turned up this song that caught my attention last week,
 Down With The Sickness
 Which got me thinking about how shitty my life really was.
 Took the blade and pressed it to my wrist, hard.
 Blood oozed off my arm, onto the pillow, the floor.
 Not enough or too much?
 I couldn’t even kill myself the right way.
 Shit, I didn’t even know there was a right way.
 Sitting on the edge of the bed letting a crimson ribbon of blood 
 Twisting its liquid body around my arm.
 Maybe this was life’s way of keeping me here, letting
 Me suffer more than I already was.
 
 MS. WILKINSON-killer’s kindergarten teacher 
 Blake was the kind of boy who didn’t talk much, 
 Just sat by himself during playtime, in 
 A corner somewhere while 
 The other boys pretended to race each other 
 In racecars made up of cardboard boxes. 
 Nobody invited him to play, he didn’t ask. 
 Just stared at them, like if he thought hard enough 
 He could guess which boy was going to win that round 
 There was this small bag of Legos by my desk 
 That he always took and played with, 
 Making little cars, or people sitting in chairs, 
 Or New York buildings. 
 I remember this event that took place clearly one day 
 When little Blake did the usual, 
 Wait for all the kids to leave the room, while 
 He got out of his seat and took the Legos and 
 Sat in the corner. 
 I didn’t notice Chris and his sidekicks go back in 
 But when I went back into the room to get 
 The jump ropes locked inside the storage closet, 
 Chris was standing in front of Blake 
 Who looked around hoping someone would help him, hoping I 
 Would help him. 
 But he didn’t see me. 
 Looking at the ground I saw a dark puddle underneath, 
 Blake. 
 He must have peed on himself.
 I ran up to him and told him to go to the nurse.
 He walked out the classroom, pants soaked.
 
 PERRIS SCOTT-outsider 
 I was in the bathroom when it happened 
 Applying my blast blue eyeliner and cosmic rush purple lipstick. 
 I had ditched sixth period for one purpose and one 
 Purpose only 
 To avoid the unwelcome supply of stares 
 And judgment seeping out of 
 Humanity’s skin like sweat. 
 My appearance was nobody’s business 
 I remember looking in the mirror at my 
 Save The Whales t-shirt, 
 Green-and-gray plaid skirt, 
 Pink Argyle socks, 
 And combat boots. 
 I laughed at myself and said 
 Yeah I was different 
 So shoot me. 
 Wrong thing to say. 
 Out of nowhere I heard these
 Shots started firing outside the bathroom, 
 People screaming 
 Crying 
 The sound of rubber sneakers skidding on tile… 
 I didn’t think, couldn’t 
 Just ran into the farthest stall from the door, 
 Locked it, 
 And stood on the toilet, 
 Hoping that whoever the hell 
 Was shooting wouldn’t come in here. 
 That’s when I heard the door squeak open 
 A hurried pair of shoes frantically wandering the bathroom. 
 Where they looking for someone? 
 For me? 
 Or could it have been some other kid scared
 shitless like I was right now?
 But then I saw the pair of black Pumas stop in front of my stall. 
 How screwed up would that be if that was the last
 Thing I saw before I died?
 A fucking pair of worn down pumas.
 I closed my eyes 
 Waiting for the only thing that separated me 
 From the killer to break down. 
 But nothing happened. 
 Then a voice: 
 “I know you’re in there Perris.” 
 I could tell it was a boy.
 He stood there for some time more 
 Then walked out of the bathroom. 
 Shots fired outside again. 
 I knew who it was.
 The feeling was there all along 
 It wasn’t until after the shooting, 
 When I found out that Blake was wearing 
 Black Pumas that day
 That I knew he saved me from Death.
 
 TRAVY HALE-black basketball player 
 I knew Blake was going to shoot up the school 
 I knew two weeks before it happened 
 I knew when he was going to do it 
 And how 
 I knew what guns he had 
 And how he would get them 
 I even knew who he was going to kill 
 In order 
 I knew because I stole his notebook. 
 He was always writing in that thing 
 Like It was his life or something 
 When the second period bell rang 
 Blake rushed out the door 
 In a hurry 
 I saw a vanilla-and-licorice colored composition notebook 
 Sitting neatly under the seat where Blake sat. 
 I looked around making sure nobody 
 Saw what I was about to do 
 Which was put the notebook in my bag 
 At home I looked though the pages, 
 I never knew how depressed he was 
 How miserable his life was or what people did to make 
 It that way 
 I only saw him as the butt of every joke, 
 The loser on everybody’s lips 
 But I didn’t think it cut that deep 
 Everybody got teased in high school 
 That was the law of the land around here 
 Tease and get teased 
 You either pretended like it didn’t 
 Mean anything 
 Or 
 Walk away like you never heard a thing.
 But one thing never do is show it.
 That just showed weakness.
 And here, well weakness is your kryptonite. 
 Blake showed that it hurt 
 And that’s why people went back for more. 
 They knew it was easy to get under his skin, 
 To make him squirm without any 
 Trouble at all, just a few 
 Words that could either 
 Make or break you. 
 I flipped until I saw a doodled page with the word 
 Hit List underlined in red pen at the top 
 Of the page 
 It had every name 
 Of the person he wanted to kill 
 In order from their last names, 
 Every thing that anyone has every said or done 
 To him that made him hurt 
 Some had a tally by their name 
 While most had half a dozen 
 The name that caught my eye was 
 Chris Reid, the varsity basketball star, 
 Underlined and circled 
 With 43 tallies. 
 I counted each one. 
 An arrow pointing away from his name 
 Showed the words that made my blood turn cold. 
 First. 
 One word, one meaning. 
 I knew what it meant. 
 That’s when I saw something else, 
 Something I didn’t want to see but did. 
 Stuffing the notebook back into my bag 
 Like it was an invisible fire torch 
 I stared at the floor, dazed 
 I don’t know when I fell asleep but 
 The last thing I remember is 
 Seeing my name 
 Under Chris Reid’s, 
 With 31 tallies, 
 An arrow pointing away from my name 
 Saying second. 
 God, I was second. 
 I knew what that meant too. 
 
 BLAKE 
 I remember panicking. 
 I remember squirming. 
 I remember screaming at myself. 
 Wondering how I could have lost the damn notebook 
 Things were in there that 
 Weren’t supposed to be seen, 
 The “Hit List” being one of them. 
 I told myself I’d probably misplaced it somewhere 
 In my room 
 Under the textbooks 
 Or inside the clothes hamper. 
 The last place I had it was…was… 
 first period. 
 Dammit.
 I remembered rushing out of the classroom with my 
 Backpack on my shoulder, My calc textbook, 
 But no notebook. 
 Realizing I left it under the seat of my chair, 
 Where anyone could have read it, 
 Could have seen the deep, dark secrets 
 I’d naively written on the telltale pages of 
 A notebook. 
 I knew someone had, 
 No doubt about that. 
 I just needed to know who… 
 And fast. 
 
 FRANCINE 
 I walked fifteen blocks. 
 Fifteen blocks to nowhere 
 Fifteen blocks away from Swingley High 
 But most importantly 
 3,600 seconds to freedom, 
 60 minutes of confusion and astonishment 
 21,000 steps to safety. 
 I don’t know where I am 
 Or where I’m going. 
 All I know is that I’m alive and well. 
 Alive anyway. 
 The shock hit me like a 
 Blow to the stomach, 
 Breathtaking and a little too real. 
 People I knew were shot, killed. 
 My friends, Mark, I didn’t know what happened 
 To any of them. 
 I wanted to turn back, 
 To find out if they were okay, alive, 
 But deep down I knew I couldn’t go back. 
 I’d just end up like the rest of them.
 
 REGINA MILES-school secretary 
 Two days after Spring Break Blake Greene 
 Came into the office and asked to see 
 Ms. Davidson, the school counselor. 
 He handed me an orange slip 
 Saying that he needed to see the counselor 
 Immediately, 
 signed by his history teacher 
 Mr. McCormick. 
 I told him to take a seat until 
 Ms. Davidson got back from her 
 Lunch break. 
 He looked around in this nervous kind of way, 
 Like somebody was watching him or something. 
 I knew right then that Blake 
 Had problems, but I never knew they 
 Were that bad…. 
 
 
 BLAKE 
 When Mr. McCormick called me 
 Up to her desk and handed me a slip of orange paper, 
 I knew where he was sending me. 
 I still didn’t know where my notebook was 
 Or if someone turned it in, 
 But I did know one thing: she must have thought 
 That I was a very troubled adolescence because 
 She was sending me to the counselor’s office. 
 Yeah, like a counselor can label me severely depressive 
 By asking me what I did for my 3rd birthday… 
 Don’t think so. 
 So I head to the secretary desk and ask for 
 The so called “counselor” but find out she was 
 On her lunch break-joy, 
 I think I’ll wait 
 For her in her office and suck on 
 A nice little cherry lollipop, 
 Gag me please. 
 So I turn around thinking maybe 
 I can get out of school early or something 
 When Ms. Miles tells me to take a seat 
 Until she gets back. 
 See, that’s how I know everyone’s in 
 This world to mess with my head. 
 But I take the farthest seat away 
 From the secretary desk and 
 Stare at some poster promoting 
 Abstinence in our school. 
 Yeah that word doesn’t even exist 
 In high school. 
 I’m looking around trying to find some 
 Sign of a clock to see how much 
 Wasted time has passed, 
 When in walks Ms. Davidson in 
 A overly-flamboyant pink and yellow dress 
 With moonlight tinted heels. 
 “Blake, are you here to see me?” 
 Uh no, I just love looking at an abstinence 
 Poster all day. 
 “Uh, yeah,” I say. 
 We walk into her office, 
 Her asking all these questions, 
 But not truly understanding the answers, 
 Or simply, not wanting to. 
 
 Becky Hines- school nurse
 I see all types of cases with teens, from rape to
 Pregnancies to substance but when the Greene kid
 Came in and handed me an orange slip that his teacher signed
 That said SEE IMMEDIATELY.
 
 
 PERRIS 
 After about twenty more minutes in the bathroom 
 The shots decreased, maybe one or two 
 Every five minutes or so. 
 They sounded far off so I think I’d take a 
 Chance, 
 Even though I knew that a chance 
 Like this was slim to none, 
 A chance was a chance. 
 I walked across the bathroom stall 
 Combat boots wet on the sole 
 From water spilt on the floor. 
 Too much noise. 
 The last thing I wanted was for him to come back. 
 So took off the combat boots and tossed 
 Them in the trash. 
 Slowly opening the door 
 I made my way toward the front of the school. 
 Fresh corpses and glassed-over eyes 
 Greeted me with horror 
 All these people, dead 
 People I went to school with ever since freshman 
 Year, 
 People who use to some to my birthday 
 Party in elementary, gone. 
 I had to get out of here, if not 
 For me, for them. 
 
 TRAVY
 The day of the shooting I couldn’t 
 stop thinking about it 
 About the 2nd marked by my 
 name underlined more than once. 
 I walked around looking for anything and everything 
 That seemed out of place. 
 Kids laughed 
 Sneakers squeaked on the floor 
 Doors slammed shut 
 Bells rung like crazy 
 I was making myself paranoid… 
 No HE was making me paranoid. 
 I had no doubt that he would commit such a 
 Heinous act cause well, 
 Everybody who knew him knew he 
 Had problems that most people didn’t have. 
 Had unresolved issues. 
 I didn’t know what they were.
 Nobody knew. 
 But I what I did know was that us 
 Making fun of him wasn’t helping his case, 
 Or ours. 
 
 PERRIS 
 I didn’t see everyone in the halls 
 And if I did they were either wounded or dead 
 I didn’t care to know which. 
 As I walked over the limp bodies, 
 I felt a head grab hold 
 Of my leg 
 Weighing down on me some 
 Too much 
 So I stumbled forward. 
 Looked down to see Travy Hale 
 Looking up at me 
 Petrified 
 Scared 
 Dazed 
 His eyes screamed help me 
 But his lips were frozen solid 
 Its like his all entire face was a piece of 
 Glass that would break 
 I could see it 
 I could see the cracks already appearing 
 His eyes showed the distinct track of dried 
 Salty tears 
 Worry lines on forehead 
 Face twitching 
 Listening for anything, ANYTHING. 
 And I understood. 
 I knew what he was listening for, 
 The whole school was listening for the same thing. 
 
 ANGELA
 Biology sucks.
 That’s the last thing I thought 
 Before the librarian started screaming all hysterical
 And whatnot.
 Before pointing to the double doors of the library,
 Pointing to the killer.
 I don’t know.
 Some dude with shaggy hair stuck to his face
 By sweat and fear.
 More fear than anything though.
 I could tell.
 Wait he looks familiar, too familiar.
 I remember that same ACDC shirt that used to be
 Black but had too many spins in the washer.
 No.
 Please.
 Not him, anyone BUT him.
 Blake.
 The guy I grew up with.
 Him.
 Me.
 Us.
 The spastic loner and the black obsessed chic.
 Ha some duo.
 But this boy standing here,
 Gun in hand
 Eyes anxiously looking around for victims,
 People who hurt him,
 No this wasn’t him.
 This was someone different.
 Someone completely not Blake.
 It couldn’t be.
 This person scared me.
 
 FRANCINE
 I walked a couple of miles down the road.
 Stopped at some gas station.
 Bought a bag of chips, some water 
 With the extra money I had in my back pocket.
 God.
 People were hurt, dead even.
 People I’d known for years,
 Went to kindergarten with.
 I couldn’t stand in some gas station eating a
 Fucking bag of chips while some psycho 
 Shoots up my school.
 Hell no.
 So I do what I knew I was going to do deep down.
 I was going back. 
 
 TRAVY 
 I was shot, bad.
 I felt this sharp, intense pain in my shoulder,
 Blood staining my favorite jersey.
 Nobody was around.
 Nothing but lifeless bodies.
 A sea of empty eyes and vacant souls
 Surround me in a mass on the cold tile floor.
 Hair in faces, feet without shoes.
 Reminded me of one of those movies you watch
 In class they show us to scare us into being
 Grateful for our lives.
 Grateful.
 The last thing I would use to describe this.
 This thing.
 This unspeakable thing that nobody would have thought
 In a million years would happen.
 Movement.
 Some girl comes out of the bathroom, mismatched socks
 Mismatched everything to be honest.
 Something in her eyes, fear.
 Could read it as if she had it written across her forehead
 In bold black text.
 For everyone to see.
 
 BLAKE
 This thrill went through me as I walked 
 Around the school, light no longer coming in
 From the glass doors by the front hallway.
 Eyes looked back at me, scared.
 For once I was in control, 
 Control of what happened around me,
 Control of the people that walk these same hallways
 Just…control.
 Such a salty word coming from my tongue,
 So foreign.
 Like the transfer students that come here every year,
 New and inexperienced.
 But despite it all I loved it.
 The control I mean,
 I embraced it like my mother’s hug,
 Breathed it in like the smell of weed.
 Not that I tried weed.
 Passed by some stoner kids in the back by the dumpsters
 One day after lunch and got a whiff of the stuff,
 Strong.
 Like not cigs.
 Yeah, control was sweet.
 Almost as sweet as revenge, but not quite.
 
 MS. GREENE
 I remember one day like it was yesterday.
 The school nurse called me saying that
 Blake had peed on himself and he needed more clothes
 So maybe I should come whenever I had time and bring 
 him an extra pair.
 I hung up the phone and leaned on the wall.
 Blake was potty-trained,
 I taught him as soon as he was 2 years old.
 
 CHRIS
 Heavy thoughts weighed my mind as I lay dying on 
 This cold, gymnasium floor.
 This same floor I won countless games on, 
 The floor that I sought refuge on,
 Found peace with when all I wanted to do was be alone.
 Now I despised this floor.
 It would be the last thing I would ever get to see.
 Now that I think about it, its pretty ironic.
 
 FRANCINE
 As I walked back to school it started raining.
 The drops hit my skin like sharp, tiny needles.
 If they were any sharper I swear they 
 would pierce my soul.
 Now that I think about it, that
 Wouldn’t be such a bad idea.
 My walk turned into a slight jog, my jog
 Turning into a full out sprint.
 I was determined to save someone, anyone
 From Blake’s chilling rampage.
 Cars honked as they sped past me, 
 Past a few people on the sidewalk
 Going for their afternoon runs,
 Completely oblivious of the world around them.
 I was cold.
 I was soaked.
 But I was…alive.
 Couldn’t even think the word in my head, it sounded 
 so absurd.
 Alive.
 Something many people at Swingley High weren’t.
 
 REGINA MILES
 I took refuge under my desk, right by the window 
 facing the front of the school.
 In the room across the way was the principal’s 
 office, door left open.
 I don’t know why I noticed it but I looked on my desk
 And saw the phone lines flashing.
 Surely they didn’t know.
 Didn’t know what was happening.
 What was to come.
 What was going to happen.
 I gazed at the entrance of my office, silently listening 
 to potential footsteps.
 Hearing nothing but upsetting silence
 I slowly took the phone off the hook and dialed 9-1-1.
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This article has 15 comments.
ive read alot of your work but this is the best so far!your characters were developed sooo well and their profiles are soo realistic.it kept me wanting more and more...it sucks you havent finsihed it yet but this is AMAZING!
-Michael
--Mari, your crazy friend from J.M.S. :)
an amazing writer.
I believe that you will go very far!
:D
~Andy(that one kidd you know)
great poetry.
i mostly liked how you wrote in different point of views
on how that person was feeling
please continue with this story
 
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NOT TODAY =:)