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| Short Stories Short Stories, usually between 500 and 2000 words. |
08-07-2004, 12:31 AM
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#1
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Writer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: New Britain, CT
Posts: 41
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One Day at the Mall
This is something I wrote back when I was in high school, and have re-written and updated for my current style of writing. Be warned, it involves a lot of teen angst horridness.
It was when of those times where life thrusts upon you the need to quickly make a decision. The sort of decision that can alter your entire path in life. All I was doing was standing outside of the store when it happened.
I had been in the mall only to go to the music store. Not much else in the gigantic temple of consumerism really interested me at that time. Well, perhaps I'd also go to the food court for something to eat; maybe some bourbon chicken. I was walking past one of those trendy clothing stores when I saw a sterile white bench, one of the many things that make the mall their natural habitat. I had just walked two miles to get to the mall, so it seemed a good idea to have a seat.
While I sat, I took stock of my surroundings. I saw all the people wandering around. Screaming children, preppy kids in their GAPercrombie and Eaglepostale uniforms, distinctly unhappy adults wallowing in their own banality, a few seniors apparently getting some exercise, and, of course, the exhausted mall employees. Quite the menagerie. My attention soon turned to the store behind me. I looked at the mannequins wearing their brightly pre-faded clothes, and noticed just how much like the people who shop there they were. Plastic, fake, without a will or identity of their own, forced to wear what someone else thought would be a good thing for them to wear.What a horrid existance it must be to be one of them! I could never live as someone who had to be like "everybody else". The sheer dullness of it all would prove fatal for me, I was quite sure, unless I just did myself in out of the despair of living a meaningless existence devoid of identity.
I had been pondering this for about ten seconds when they showed up. They were dressed all in black, carrying a wooden crate, a megaphone, big backpacks, and a few large buckets that seemed to be covered. There were five of them. One set the crate down in front of the store, and another stepped onto it. I noticed that the crate had the name of a brand of soap on it... that guy actually just got up on a soapbox! Holy literalism, Batman. Anyway, the guy on the soapbox grabbed the megaphone and started to speak.
"Listen to me!"
A couple passers-by did so.
"I know many of you are enslaved!"
Some people stopped to watch.
"You are enslaved by your own simple desire for acceptance and conformity!"
The audience started to grow.
"These people" he gestured at the store behind him, "Seek to use your need to be liked against you!"
Those watching had now begun to constitute what could be called a crowd.
"You must free yourselves from the grip of the false consumer gods!"
Now everyone was watching him. The atmosphere had become very tense.
"These places have become like unto temples to you, and you must abandon the temples before they bleed you
dry!"
The crowd began to boo and hiss. A few people, myself included, began to cheer. I had begun to cheer on a lunatic on a soapbox in a mall, and I was enjoying it.
"All gods are created by humans! The corporate gods seek to use us for their own ends, but we must not let them!"
Someone threw something at him. Both cheering and jeering became louder.
"We must destroy what we have created! We must rise up against the gods and eliminate them for all time! Let there be no god but man!"
The rest of the group took the buckets into the store, uncovered them, and threw the messy red contents onto the merchandise.
"Pigs' blood for the corporate pigs!"
I will never be able to forget that smell.
The throbbing mass of the booing crowd threw things and tried to get through the human barrier created by the few who agreed with the speaker. I was among the barrier, pushing back the enraged horde, screaming "Down with consumer conformity!" and other slogans. The booing, throwing, pushing, sloganeering, and screaming continued for
about ten minutes. Store employees and customers kept slipping on the blood, their trendy shoes having no traction whatsoever.
Mall security finally arrived, trying to calm things down. They told the crowd to leave and made the rest of us wait for the authorities to arrive. Quickly, twenty men in khakis, long-sleeved t-shirts, and tech vests lowered themselves from the ceiling on hemp cords. Each carried a large gun with a happy face painted on it.
"Hands against the wall!" screamed one of them. The five demonstrators laughed, but the rest of us who were just going along with it began to get frightened. One of the demonstrators handed out gas masks.
"What are you doing?!" demanded the apparent leader of the troops, "Why do you not respect our power and authority?"
"Lo-sers" remarked another of the troopers.
"You're obviously not cool. We'll have to take you in for questioning" said the leader of the prep-squad.
"I doubt it" said the man with the megaphone, now wearing a gas mask. He then reached into his pocket and took out some sort of grenade. He threw it, and a great cloud of noxious smoke came forth. Nothing could be seen. I had my mask on, but I was still so terrified that I had no idea what else to do.
Suddenly, somebody grabbed me and carried me away. When we were away from the smoke, I saw that it was the man with the megaphone. All the demonstrators and people with them were running like hell. Once everyone was outside the mall, he put me down.
"You did very well in there. Thanks." he said.
"You're welcome, I guess."
"If you want to join us, we'd love to have you. We can use all the help we can get, and I have a good feeling about you."
"Thanks, but no thanks."
"Why not?"
"Well, this was great fun and all, and I certainly agree with you, but..."
"But?"
"But I prefer not to be led."
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08-07-2004, 01:26 AM
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#2
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Writer
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: CA
Posts: 47
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Stuff I don't like:
[quote]one of the many things that make the mall their natural habitat.[quote]
whose?
Quote:
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uniforms, distinctly unhappy adults, wallowing in their own banality, a few
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unhappy adults wallowing
Stuff I do like:
The story 
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08-07-2004, 01:39 AM
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#3
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Writer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: New Britain, CT
Posts: 41
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[quote="Alys R."]Stuff I don't like:
[quote]one of the many things that make the mall their natural habitat. The benches'.
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08-07-2004, 05:18 AM
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#4
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Scribe
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 95
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Needs formatting. The carriage returns are wrecking the flow of it.
__________________
Grizzled veteran of the console wars.
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08-07-2004, 05:31 AM
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#5
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Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Vancouver, Washington
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,209
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Agreed. I couldn't read it because the formatting drove me crazy... Then again, I'm rather Compulsive about that.
__________________
Bobo the Goat
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08-08-2004, 12:14 AM
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#6
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Writer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: New Britain, CT
Posts: 41
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Reformatted.
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08-08-2004, 12:16 AM
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#7
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Profound Writer
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: North Carolina
Gender: Male
Posts: 900
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Very interesting...kept me reading  Keep up the good work.
Novicewriter
__________________
"There are only two things that scare me...Dr. Evil and Carnies. You know, circus folk. They have small hands and smell like cabbage."
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08-17-2004, 09:40 PM
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#8
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Writer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: San Diego
Posts: 36
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Great. I love the twist at the end, although the 'teen angst', as you said, is a bit irritating.
One thing though, personally for me, is I find it rather hard to believe that a 'rebel with a sleep grenade' could take down a squad of specially trained-well armed men.
Maybe it's just because I'm really into studying the Army and things like that, so it's hard for me to believe something like that.
Very well written, though. Keep it up.
Stepping into oncoming traffic,
Collideascope
__________________
They say you can’t be hip,
But I don’t care what they say,
The thing I got’s cold blooded,
And I’m coming from a brand new place,
I’m dealing quick and I don’t miss a lick and I better don’t leave no trace. -James Brown
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