{"id":4819,"date":"2024-04-23T10:12:59","date_gmt":"2024-04-23T16:12:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/?p=4819"},"modified":"2024-05-01T20:18:10","modified_gmt":"2024-05-02T02:18:10","slug":"illinois-awaits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/illinois-awaits\/","title":{"rendered":"Illinois Awaits"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><em>by Shelby Jones, First Place Winner of the Novus High School Creative Writing Contest<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The woods behind her house went so deep we could have never explored it all, but she<br>and I used that to our advantage. We were wizards\u2026 powerful, unfathomable wizards. The<br>woods were our hideout, our safe spot. Even though the air was blistering cold, and the wind<br>chill was fifteen degrees, we were out there for hours. Jumping between rocks gave us a quick<br>shot of adrenaline while climbing the trees tested our limits. Certain rocks had fallen over one<br>another to create a perfect hideaway. Our wizarding activities took course throughout the entire<br>stretch of the forest; we always went deeper into the forest than her mother allowed. The only<br>thing that could force us inside was her mother&#8217;s sweet voice, calling for lunch. Her specialty<br>was the \u201cChaco taco\u201d &#8211; an Eggos waffle smothered with Nutella and folded in half to resemble a<br>taco. The smell of the toaster slightly burning the shell to our tacos was swallowing the fresh air.<br>The bliss of childhood had never been so real.<br><br>Olivia was the kind of friend you just know. You don&#8217;t remember how, when, or why you<br>became friends, but you are. She was a warm-toned blonde with just a few freckles dotted across<br>her nose. She wore big square glasses that were always either plum purple or black with a light<br>blue rim. She was extremely fit, never missing a day of soccer practice, her family was mine and<br>mine was hers.<br><br>Flash forward a year, I get the news. My best friend, Olivia, will be moving to Illinois in<br>August. My heart has never dropped so fast. It felt like I had swallowed a fifty-pound weight and<br>couldn&#8217;t get it back up. No tears ran, not yet; those would come later. It was the most world-<br>shattering, soul-wrenching news I could have ever imagined. We were about to go into the sixth<br>grade: the most dramatic change in my preteen life was about to occur, and there was no getting<br>through that without Olivia. She called me to tell me the news, \u201cHey Shelby,\u201d the sweet voice of<br>Olivia&#8217;s mother. \u201cHey, Mrs. Katie!\u201d I answered excitedly, with no idea of what was to come.<br>\u201cMe and Olivia have some news. You may not like it,\u201d she said begrudgingly. I swallowed the<br>lump that had just appeared in my throat, \u201cOlivia&#8217;s dad got a promotion,\u201d she said. I interrupted<br>her with a quick congrats, she let out a sigh, \u201c For him to keep doing good at his job, we need to<br>move to Illinois.\u201d There were so many ideas running through my head about what this phone call<br>was about. Not that. Never that.<br><br>There was never any doubt that she and I were the most important people to each other.<br>But before she left, the question arose as we were sitting on the blistering playground swings. It<br>was a hot August summer, and her neighborhood playground was calling our name. We walked<br>behind her house to the large football-sized field. Glancing across the way through the bright<br>almost autumn sun, there was a gentle outline of the playground swings in the distance. Skipping<br>our way through the field, we chatted about simple things like Harry Potter or what the plan for<br>tomorrow was. We got to the playground and ever-so-quickly hopped on the swings. The air<br>flew through our hair and we pumped our legs to get our swings higher and higher. I stopped my<br>momentum very suddenly when I had my thought; for I couldn&#8217;t swing and question my entire<br>friendship at the same time. \u201cOlivia?\u201d, I said with a slight weariness to my voice. \u201cYes?\u201d she was<br>out of breath from exerting so much energy trying to get the swing as high as it would allow.<br><br>\u201cWill you make a new best friend when you move, or will you just call me all the time?\u201d Sixth<br>grade me, truly believed that she would never make another friend, for it felt I wouldn&#8217;t either. \u201cI<br>don&#8217;t know. I might have to. I don&#8217;t wanna be all alone at school.\u201d She answered; I could hear the<br>worry in her voice. She and I never brought that subject up again. I was convinced I would be<br>alone while in middle school, high school, and college, and then eventually just die alone.<br><br>We went about the beginning of school rituals as usual: school shopping, clothes<br>shopping, schedule reading, and multiplication flash cards. This time it felt different. Olivia was<br>only going to be in my class for a few weeks, then, poof-gone. The thought of her not being there<br>to complain and de-stress with me brought a genuinely sick feeling to my stomach. She and I<br>hung out every day that she was available. She was in travel soccer and was very good for an<br>eleven-year-old. Somehow we managed to hang out so often that the woods never got a break,<br>not until that day- the day she left.<br><br>The day had come, and the night before was sleepless. My mom woke me up earlier than<br>the birds sang to say goodbye before they left. It was a chilly morning, the type to make those<br>microscopic hairs on your arms stand tall. The air was thin and the sky was a strange shade of<br>blue, almost gray. Her house, even from the outside, was dead. The liveliness and joy that used<br>to radiate from her home had been vacuumed away. My mom and I pulled into the driveway<br>slowly. The crackle and pop of the tires on the driveway gravel seemed to last for hours. Finally,<br>the car came to a stop. I wish the car door would have just locked shut, forever, and not let me<br>out into this nightmare. My heart told me to not touch that door handle, but my mother&#8217;s nagging<br>voice told my head that I had to get out.<br><br>I walked into the garage, and through the door leading to her house. Somehow the outside<br>world\u2019s gloominess leaked inside. No barstools carefully tucked under the hightop, no crayons<br>on the counter, no toaster, no more pictures delicately hung on the fridge. I could tell Olivia was<br>tired; she was just standing there, waiting. The entrance room floor was stacked with the few<br>remaining boxes, the ones that wouldn&#8217;t fit in the U-Haul. She gave me a look, one I was<br>unfamiliar with: it felt alien. We took a walk around the now ghost town of a house. Every step<br>we took seemed to creek louder than before. It echoed through the empty halls and the, somehow<br>sadder, paler walls. As if we were in our old age, she and I recalled memories as we explored<br>each empty, cold room. The spellbook we wrote in her bedroom. The Barbies we stripped of hair<br>in her playroom. The \u201cghosts\u201d we hunted for in her living room. The ceilings were so high I<br>could have mistaken the house for a circus tent and I was the clown, running circles around the<br>ring of truth that was her getting in that car and driving away.<br><br>We came back around to the entry hall, where our parents were still chatting about \u201cadult<br>things\u201d. I knew when I saw my mom&#8217;s face that it was time for them to go. I couldn&#8217;t accept it. I<br>decided to be the bigger person because who knows the pain Olivia was feeling, moving away<br>from all she ever knew. I assumed her pain was ten times mine, which was unimaginable but I<br>tried to understand.<br><br>We rarely hugged each other. Throughout our friendship the only times I can recall<br>hugging was for a picture or when she would win a soccer game; the only times we did, they<br>were happy hugs. This hug was different. She and I hugged for what felt like an eternity. Her<br>arms were above mine, over my shoulder. She was so tall, five foot six inches while in the sixth<br>grade. I was wrapped around her like a helpless sloth, wishing for someone to save me from this<br>slow, stretched-out goodbye. The saddest goodbye of my life. When the hug was over, her shirt<br>was covered in tears. I was embarrassed until I looked over at my shoulder and saw a wet spot<br>from where she had rested her chin. For some reason, her warm tears on my shoulder reassured<br>me that I knew I was special to her too. One final goodbye and a quick hug to Mrs. Katie and we<br>drove off.<br><br>School was never the same. Her presence was completely gone. I thought because I could<br>still call and text her, that it wouldn&#8217;t feel as if she was gone. It seems overdramatic to call it a<br>loss. So many people lose their friends and family members every year. Olivia hadn&#8217;t passed; she<br>hadn&#8217;t been in some freak accident. She had, however, started a different life. She goes by the<br>same name, she has the same family, and she may never change her personality; however, she<br>would make new friends. New friends, to an eleven-year-old, is the ultimate betrayal. Having<br>one BFF was still the fad, and the clicks had already been decided and finalized. My BFF, my<br>click, was gone.<br><br>As time went on, the crying became subdued. Less wet pillows and empty tissue boxes. It<br>was no longer the only thing on my mind. I began to focus on other friends who were physically<br>there, not just on a phone call that made me cry every time it ended. She still comes to mind, she<br>still comes up on my feed. Somehow, we still ended up being interested in the same things.<br>Maybe we are destined to be friends. So if we ever do reconnect, Olivia, let&#8217;s play in the woods,<br>let&#8217;s jump over some rocks, and let&#8217;s eat so many Chaco-Tacos that our bellies become numb.<br>Let&#8217;s explore who we have become, and who we used to be.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Shelby Jones, First Place Winner of the Novus High School Creative Writing Contest The woods behind her house went so deep we could have never explored it all, but sheand I used that to our advantage. We were wizards\u2026 powerful, unfathomable wizards. Thewoods were our hideout, our safe spot. Even though the air was [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":37,"featured_media":4586,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_editorskit_title_hidden":false,"_editorskit_reading_time":0,"_editorskit_is_block_options_detached":false,"_editorskit_block_options_position":"{}","_themeisle_gutenberg_block_has_review":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"art_contributors":[],"literary_contributors":[371],"class_list":["post-4819","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-nonfiction","literary_contributors-jones-shelby"],"acf":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-content\/uploads\/sea-glass.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4819","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/37"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4819"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4819\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5304,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4819\/revisions\/5304"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4586"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4819"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4819"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4819"},{"taxonomy":"art_contributors","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/art_contributors?post=4819"},{"taxonomy":"literary_contributors","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/novusliterary.com\/2024-archive\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/literary_contributors?post=4819"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}