Sunday, March 23, 2014

Prologue: Sunset Valley Chapter Two

The next afternoon, Roxanne followed the blue-haired boy to his house down by the beach.



She raced up the stairs after him, stopping him before he got to the door. "Hi," she said in between pants. "I'm Roxanne."
He stared at her, blinking several times. His eyes kept returning back to her green-hair. "I'm Donovan," he replied, still unsure what to do about her.
"I like your hair. It's a pretty color."
"I like yours too. I've never seen anyone with hair like that."
"Same here."
"...Do you want to do homework together?"
"Sure."


Roxanne wasn't used to having such a long table with only two chairs at it. She didn't like how far away it put her from Donovan. She wanted to sit closer, get to know him, and she couldn't do that with a giant piece of wood and glass in between them.
"So do you have any brothers or sisters?" she asked him.
"No," Donovan said quickly. "My dad just remarried someone, and she doesn't want kids."
"What happened to your mom?"
"I don't know. It's always been me and my dad. When he's not working, that is."
"What does your dad do?"
"He owns a big business. I'm gonna run it when I'm all grown up."
"That's cool! You know what you wanna do when you grow up!"
"Yeah, what do you wanna do?"
Roxanne was quiet. She had never thought about that. Her parents had always encouraged her to do whatever she had wanted, yet she had never once considered being a grown up and what that would entail. "Something cool. Something different. Something that makes a difference."


It was late when Roxanne headed home, still thinking about what Donovan had said as she left. "You wanna do homework again tomorrow?" It hadn't been much, but it was enough to Roxanne that she started to feel closer to him. Befriending someone always took time, but she felt like today had been especially successful.


The next day, Roxanne's class went downtown for a field trip. As exciting as it was to leave the classroom, she kept hoping another class would join hers.


But Donovan wasn't there. Why was she so concerned with him being there? Why did she keep thinking about him? Was she in love? Or did she just want to spend more time with him because he was so much like her? Two little kids with crazy colored hair in the same town couldn't be a coincidence, could it?



"Dad?" Roxanne asked one night as he was reading her favorite bedtime story. "What was it like when you and Mom fell in love?"
Clive chuckled. "Babe, why are you worried about that? You're not even old enough to be falling in love with boys!"
"I know, Dad, but I wanna know. What does love feel like? I mean, all the stories say you know when it's the one, but is that how it really is?"
"You know, it didn't start out as that lovey-dovey stuff. It started out slow. We were in college when we met, and I loved the way she made me laugh."
"So that's the only reason you liked her? What about her hair and eyes? Didn't you look at those too?"
Clive stopped a little bit, looking at his daughter's hair for a long while. "I did, but physical features aren't what make a person, sweetie. You know that. But personality is what's important. Our personalities just fit together. And the funniest thing happened: she changed me. And I changed her too."
"But what if I don't want to change, Dad?"


He stroked her hair and she laid down, pulling the sheets in closer. "You will," he said softly. "It'll be so small you won't even notice until you look back." He kissed her forehead. "Good-night, sweetie."
"G'night, daddy," Roxanne mumbled.

Sorry! Forgot to turn off headline effects again!

When Roxanne heard that Donovan had never had a sleep-over before, Roxanne threw one that Friday, inviting all her friends over. She hadn't changed into her pajamas yet, but she watched Donovan's awkward smile turn into a more relaxed one as he continued to interact with the other kids. Roxanne loved having so many people in her house. It felt like having siblings.


But once again, the dream ended and Roxanne was back alone in her room, sleeping alone.


"Roxanne," Donovan said, caught off guard by the hug he was caught in. "You called me over and you sounded worried out of your mind! You okay?"
"I'm fine." Roxanne smiled at him. "I came up with a nickname for you."
"Wait, a nickname?"
"Donovan is such a mouthful. So from now on, I'm calling you Donny."
He laughed. "You called me over just to give me a nickname?"
"Well, you wanna give me one?"
"Don't you already have one, Roxy?"
"Yeah, but only Mom and Dad call me that...unless you want to as well..."
"Okay. Roxy it is then."
"Donny, you're my best friend!"


He hugged her this time. She couldn't how Donny was smiling at her, like he had just found the world's greatest treasure chest and it was all his. But she could feel it in his hug.


"Hey, Mom?" Roxanne asked one evening in between daydreaming about jumping out of the swing and into the stars.
"Yeah?" Anita said, holding the swing back so she could hear her daughter better.
"When is Dad gonna let me drive his motorcycle? It's so cool!"
"Over his dead body." She dropped the swing, listening in delight as her daughter screamed first in fear, then in laughter as she resumed swinging.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Prologue: Sunset Valley Chapter One

Roxanne was like every other child. With the exception she was born with green hair. No one knew what to make of the girl with green hair.


To avoid ridicule, her parents, Clive and Anita, moved to Sunset Valley where no one knew them or their past.


They were determined to make her life as full as her smile when she was tickled.


To give her daughter a sense of solidarity, Anita dyed her brown hair the exact same shade of green as Roxanne's. As much as Clive missed her darker hair, he was grateful he had a wife who would make any sacrifice for their children.


Clive and Anita longed for another child, but their efforts to conceive never paid off. Neither of them blamed the other for their lack of children. Instead, they took it in stride, devoting their love to each other and their daughter.

(Author's note: I forgot to turn off hide headline effects. I didn't know how to use it until later)

Anita often looked in her daughter's golden eyes, the same as Clive's, and hoped and prayed that they would never see their shared green hair as weird. Most everyone in town assumed that Roxanne had inherited the hair from Anita, rather than spontaneously developing it in the womb. That was exactly what Anita hoped for. She didn't like having the blame shifted to her for a genetic quirk, but she would bear it if it meant Roxanne never would.


Roxanne was a fairly laid back child. She rarely complained when her food was placed on her high-chair tray.


Her favorite toy was Old Dusty, or as Roxanne would often say, clapping her hands and pointing out the window or door, "Dudee!" She loved to sit on his back, and she spent hours riding him...


...even if it was bedtime and this was the last ride.


The long hallway down the house proved to be a great place to teach Roxanne to walk. She stumbled toward her father, smiling as she realized how to shift her weight from one of her feet to the other. She toddled into his arms, and he gave a cheer as he hoisted her to the lights while Anita wiped the tears off her face.


Her little girl had grown up so fast.


Just before Roxanne began school, Clive got a hefty promotion at work, one that enabled him and Anita to finally purchase their dream home. They had seen it long ago when they first moved to Sunset Valley with Roxanne. They both agreed as they pulled into their starter home that they would one day move into that house.


The cab pulled up to the side of the Gregory's new home. Roxanne's eyes widened as she pressed her fingers to the glass. "It's huge!" she gushed to her mother.


Roxanne ran to her new room, squealing with joy at all the new toys she had in her bigger bedroom. She loved it, even if the toy box was pink instead of green.


Roxanne often played Space-Explorer over in the abandoned fire station just across the street...


...or Extreme-Couch Driver when her mother grounded her for playing in a building she wasn't supposed to be in.


Roxanne loved going to school. There were exciting things to learn and new people to meet that she could invite over for parties. Anita had done her best to assure her daughter that her green hair was nothing to be ashamed of, but she spied Roxanne tucking her hair over her ear as she climbed on the bus. At school, a few kids gave her weird looks, but no one ever said anything. Once Roxanne proved she wasn't an alien or some other supernatural creature,  Roxanne found it easy to make friends.


One day, as she left school, she spied the new boy walking down the steps. In the artificial lighting of the building, Roxanne had assumed his hair was black, like her father's. As the sunlight hit it, she saw that it was dark blue, fading into the blackness. She had never met someone with hair like hers, and her mind latched onto him.


"Who is that?" Roxanne asked herself. She was so used to talking to herself at home that she forgot that others could hear her when she spoke aloud.
"Him?" Bella Bachelor replied, looking at the boy's retreating back. "That's Donovan Whitefall. They moved into that house with the private beach. But I doubt you could get in there."


Roxanne wasn't one to let something she wanted to get away so easily. Next time Donovan went home, Roxanne was coming with him.