Spark a Story

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by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt




  Contents

  * * *

  Title Page

  Contents

  Copyright

  Introduction by Bruce Nichols

  TAL BAJAROFF. A Sixth Sense

  Miami Beach Senior High School, Miami Beach, Florida

  KAYLA BERNHOESTER. Undoing Reality

  Pattonville High School, Maryland Heights, Missouri

  JARYN BLAIR. The Gene

  Sandra Day O’Connor High School, Phoenix, Arizona

  NIKI BORGHEI. Silent Words

  New West Charter High School, Los Angeles, California

  CARLO DI BERNARDO. The Sickle

  Evanston Township High School, Evanston, Illinois

  KYLA DUHART. The Unfortunate Tale of Sam Withersby

  Indian Springs High School, San Bernardino, California

  ADELLE ELSE. Dream World

  Bishop Ireton High School, Alexandria, Virginia

  BETHANY HALL. Noli Me Tangere

  Madison Central High School, Madison, Mississippi

  AAMNA HAQ. Only a Fool Would

  Kennedy High School, Fremont, California

  ANNIE HOANG. Of Metaphors, Monsters, and Wild Thoughts

  La Salle Catholic College Preparatory, Milwaukie, Oregon

  MORGAN LEVINE. Arasing

  High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Houston, Texas

  SIMON LIU. All Westbound Trains

  Herricks High School, New Hyde Park, New York

  AELA MORRIS. A Portrait of the Artist as a Teenage Girl

  Evanston Township High School, Evanston, Illinois

  RUSHALEE NIRODI. The Cabin

  Mission San Jose High School, Fremont, California

  JOSHUA PECK. Etiam Doloris

  Notre Dame High School, Riverside, California

  HANNAH PERRY. Squish

  Lake Orion High School, Lake Orion, Michigan

  VICTORIA RICHARDSON. Black and White

  Richardson Home School, Humble, Texas

  DESTINY TRINH. The Letters

  Kennedy High School, Fremont, California

  GRACE TWOMEY. Sunday

  Apex Friendship High School, Apex, North Carolina

  AMELIA VAN DONSEL. The Flood

  Waltham High School, Waltham, Massachusetts

  Contributors’ Notes

  Connect with HMH

  Copyright © 2017 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.

  www.hmhco.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  ISBN 978-1-328-88197-7

  eISBN 978-1-328-93339-3

  v1.0517

  Cover design by Jackie Shepherd

  Cover illustration © Kate Edwards/Getty Images

  “A Sixth Sense” copyright © 2017 by Tal Bajaroff

  “Undoing Reality” copyright © 2017 by Kayla Bernhoester

  “The Gene” copyright © 2017 by Jaryn Blair

  “Silent Words” copyright © 2017 by Niki Borghei

  “The Sickle” copyright © 2017 by Carlo Di Bernardo

  “The Unfortunate Tale of Sam Withersby” copyright © 2017 by Kyla Duhart

  “Dream World” copyright © 2017 by Adelle Else

  “Noli Me Tangere” copyright © 2017 by Bethany Hall

  “Only a Fool Would” copyright © 2017 by Aamna Haq

  “Of Metaphors, Monsters, and Wild Thoughts” copyright © 2017 by Annie Hoang

  “Arasing” copyright © 2017 by Morgan Levine

  “All Westbound Trains” copyright © 2017 by Simon Liu

  “A Portrait of the Artist as a Teenage Girl” copyright © 2017 by Aela Morris

  “The Cabin” copyright © 2017 by Rushalee Nirodi

  “Etiam Doloris” copyright © 2017 by Joshua Peck

  “Squish” copyright © 2017 by Hannah Perry

  “Black and White” copyright © 2017 by Victoria Richardson

  “The Letters” copyright © 2017 by Destiny Trinh

  “Sunday” copyright © 2017 by Grace Twomey

  “The Flood” copyright © 2017 by Amelia Van Donsel

  Introduction

  FOR OVER A HUNDRED YEARS Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has published annual editions of The Best American Short Stories, a collection culled from a wide range of publications, in a two-step process. First, a series editor—in recent years, Heidi Pitlor—reads everything she can get her hands on, and picks about one hundred contenders. She removes the author names and any other identifying information and sends them to a guest editor (a different, well-known writer each year), who makes a final selection of twenty-odd choices. These collections have been so successful for so long that they have inspired a number of parallel volumes: The Best American Essays, The Best American Sports Writing, The Best American Comics, et al.

  At the same time, through the decades, HMH has been a leading publisher of preschool and elementary- and secondary-school educational materials. So it may come as a surprise that we have only now come up with a simple idea: Could we take our experience with the Best American series and combine it with our contacts at every high school in the country, in order to inspire students to enter a short story competition?

  Here’s how it worked:

  The competition was open to all high school students in the United States.

  Hundreds of entries were read independently by three HMH judges, after author names and identifying information were removed.

  Entries were judged on creativity, originality, and overall quality of writing.

  The fifty strongest entries were presented to our team of fiction editors to make a final selection of the top twenty.

  This team comprised ten men and women who read fiction submissions for a living, and who have helped HMH publish award-winning and beloved novels and story collections for many years. They really enjoyed the chance to read these young writers’ efforts. Speaking as one member, I can report that it was refreshing to have the chance to peer inside the minds of younger, developing writers, young men and women who might not yet have mastered all aspects of their craft but were experimenting with voice, character, and world building.

  There were a certain number of realistic coming-of-age stories—no surprise there—but there were a large number of science fiction and crime stories, too, and even some horror stories (though not so many that we worried about the psychological state of America’s youth).

  The winning entries have been copyedited for style and usage, and (as with any of our Best American collections) they vary widely in subject, tone, and setting. Collectively, they give us reasons to be hopeful about the next generation of American writers and storytellers. Here are twenty creative young minds at work, at least some of whom will surely go on to write full-length novels and perhaps screenplays, too. Enjoy.

  Bruce Nichols, publisher

  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

  TAL BAJAROFF

  A Sixth Sense

  IT SMELLED OF DAMP SOCKS. I usually enjoy the smell, but today something was off. The surrounding atmosphere seemed to close in on me. I snuggled further into my bed. The smell was pungent. What was about to happen? The last time I experienced this was too long ago for me to remember the outcome. My roommate called me from across the house. Excited to see her, I quickly jumped out of bed and sprinted to her. All sorts of questions started swirling in my head: What time is it? What are we going to eat? Are we going to go for a run? Is that new?

  But then I remembered that’s not what I really wan
ted to know. I glanced over only to find a darkening sky. Was it already night? My roommate had no answers for my questions. She just looked at me and smiled.

  After we finished the season finale of our favorite show, there was a flash of light followed by a booming sound that resonated within the house. This raised the hairs on the back of my neck.

  I leaped from the couch and ran to the window only to find it was raining. Of course! A storm! I should have known. As I trotted back to the couch to inform my roommate about the downpour, someone rang the doorbell. This diverted my attention away from the storm. My roommate and I proceeded to the door. More questions arose in my head: Who’s at the door? Will we be going on that run? What’s that smell? Who’s at the door?

  Once again I regained my focus. A tall, lanky figure walked through the door and greeted my roommate with a warm embrace, pushing me aside. They briskly walked out the door, leaving me behind.

  A few hours passed. The storm had died down and I could hear the clattering of keys opening the apartment door. She’s back! I rushed to greet my roommate. She bent down to pet me. “I’m sorry, Duke,” she said. My tail began to wag as she reached for the leash. As the rain ceased to fall, we stepped out onto the paved sidewalk and finally went on the run to the dog park that I had been dreaming about all day.

  KAYLA BERNHOESTER

  Undoing Reality

  IN EVERY DIRECTION there was nothing but sand. I was alone. I squinted up at the sun; its harsh rays pierced my pale skin through the cloudless sky. It was completely silent. The sand, oddly enough, didn’t burn my bare feet. In fact, it almost felt cold. I felt a wave of heat roll through my entire body, immediately followed by a stronger wave of ice as my heart forced its way into my throat and made it difficult to breathe. I covered my eyes and screamed as loudly as I possibly could in an attempt to allow myself to breathe again. Even after I ran out of breath, my anxiety continued to grow. I ran my hands through my hair, squeezing my eyelids together. I was completely lost in a foreign place with no memory of why I was there and no clue how I would get home.

  Home . . . Do I even know where home is?

  I felt a hand on my shoulder. I uncovered my eyes and saw glossy marbled water that danced with the sun on the concrete walls. My feet were dipped in the cool water, and the warm sun was beating down on my shoulders.

  “Jessica! I know the water’s cold, but that’s really no reason to shout,” my mother’s voice playfully scolded behind me. I turned myself around to see her holding a tray with three tall glasses that had a pale yellow liquid in them, in the hand she didn’t have resting on my tense shoulder.

  “I was gardening when I saw the lemons were ripe, so I thought I’d make us some lemonade.” She grinned, taking a glass and holding it out to me.

  I smiled down at the pale liquid, watching the translucent flowers bob up and down. I smiled at the thought of my five-foot-two-inch mother climbing the ten-foot tree to gather lemons. Though, this wasn’t really surprising. She loved to do anything she possibly could to make me happy.

  This included giving me little pointless things like flower-shaped ice cube trays. She loved to laugh with me about her silly impulse buys. I think that was the reason she bought that stuff: to see me smile. I could feel her looking at me as she admired my reaction to the flower-shaped ice cubes.

  “Aren’t they so cute?” my mother cheesed.

  I smiled like I was listening, but I was completely lost in thought. Even though the event had passed, I debated telling my mother what I’d really been screaming about, but I didn’t want to risk her thinking I was losing my mind over something so silly. Besides, I probably had just fallen asleep in the sun. It was very relaxing, after all. The smell of chlorine was emitting from the pool, and the breeze provided a beautiful relief from the sun that steadily grew hotter as the day aged. I could smell the hundreds of flowers that were clumped in my mom’s garden, and I heard the gentle humming of fat, fuzzy bumblebees as they stuck their faces into the center of each grouping of petals.

  I glanced over at my mother, who had seated herself in the beach chair she used specifically for the pool. People always said we looked alike, and I always took this as a compliment. A large pair of sunglasses currently covered her kind, blue eyes, and her dirty-blond hair was contained by one of those giant monster-toothed hairclips she loved to wear in the summer. Her two-piece dark-blue swimsuit exposed only a few inches of her stomach, though if she wanted to she could have pulled off a more exposing suit. Despite being forty-five, she still retained a thin, delicate figure. She was holding a book in her hand, and the tray with the two remaining lemonades sat on the small plastic table next to her.

  I grinned when I saw she still had the black-and-purple yarn friendship bracelet I had made for her in the third grade tied around her wrist. This shouldn’t have come as a shock; she still had my sloppy hand-turkeys from kindergarten hanging in the family room.

  I dipped my feet deeper into the water so it dampened just the bottom of my rolled-up jeans, staring at the strange angles that the optical illusion of moving water created.

  “Is that third glass of lemonade for Dad?” I asked, still staring at my feet.

  “What third glass?” I heard my mother ask, honest confusion in her voice.

  I turned to see my mom set the glass she was just drinking out of back onto an otherwise empty tray.

  That’s weird . . . I’m sure I saw three glasses . . .

  “Oh, never mind.” I paused. “When does Dad get off work?”

  “He actually just called about an hour ago and told me he picked up another shift, so he’ll be a few hours late. He also said something about a science project you needed help with. He said he’d be home as soon as he could, but to get a head start on it.”

  I sighed, the memory of my science project sticking in my conscience. Self-loathing boiled in my stomach as I harassed myself for procrastinating on something worth so many points. I stood up and began walking toward the glass screen door that led inside from the patio, when it suddenly disappeared.

  Actually, everything disappeared.

  The only thing left was a solid white color. I couldn’t move. I couldn’t speak. My head felt like it was going to explode and a queasy feeling began to spread along the lining of my stomach. Calm, muffled voices were interrupted by high-pitched screeching noises, which seemed to excite the voices dramatically. Blurry shadows began to move across my vision, and a dark shadow grew larger directly to my left. A deep, mature voice seemed to come out of it. I strained to listen.

  He talked for what felt like hours, but I could only understand the last five words he said:

  “Come back to me, Jess.”

  “Dad?” I gasped, but it was too late. Just as quickly as it began, it was over.

  I was staring directly into a mirror. Sinks were lined side-by-side along the entire wall, but only the one in front of me had the water on. A pile of foam was cupped into my right hand, and all of the stalls behind me had the doors cracked open. I cautiously lowered my hands into the sink and washed them off, continuously glancing into the mirror. I cupped my hands in the cold water and splashed the cold liquid on my face. I sighed and shut my eyes.

  “I’m not crazy. I’m not crazy. Okay, how did I get here?”

  But for some reason I already knew the answer. I vividly remembered walking into the restaurant with my mother. She had a red dress on that nicely complemented her freshly tanned skin. She had told the pale waiter she wanted a table for two, and he asked if a booth would suit us, in a thick Russian accent. My mother told him that would be fine, so he walked us to our table. When I sat down, I could feel that the faux leather seat was cold through my black leggings, and I decided to put on the hoodie I had carried in with me. The waiter, who introduced himself as Lucas, gave us our menus and told us he’d bring us some waters. He then left us alone to decide what food we would like to order. After a short time of discussion, we’d decided to share a lobster as a special
treat. Lucas returned with the two waters, and my mother told him what we wanted. He nodded and returned to the kitchen to bring us the lobster. I decided that I’d wash my hands while he was gone, so I excused myself to the bathroom. That’s how I had gotten there.

  So why do I also remember simply appearing here? What was that white vision I had? Was that real, or is this real? How could I have two different memories leading to the same scenario?

  I pulled a paper towel out of the wall-mounted dispenser and dried my hands and face, readying myself to go back out to my mother.

  I walked over to the table, and it was exactly how I had remembered it. My mother was still in her red dress, and the booth still felt cold when I sat down.

  “Are you okay? You seem upset,” my mother prodded, her eyebrows raised with worry.

  “Yeah, I guess,” I began to say, denying anything strange had even happened. “Or maybe not. I don’t know.”

  “What’s going on?”

  I paused.

  “Well,” I started to say, but then I stopped. “It’s probably nothing.”

  My mom pursed her lips like she always does when she’s putting a lot of effort into what she’s thinking.

  “Is your medicine acting up? The doctors said there were side effects . . .”

  Medication? I sat back in my seat, remembering the trip to the doctor’s office from last week.

  I was sitting on the bed in the white room. My mother was in one of the army-green chairs directly in front of me, my father in the other.

  “We do have an experimental drug, and its effects could begin working within the first few hours of taking the pill,” the woman in the white doctor’s coat told me.

  “What are the side effects?” my father inquired. I could tell he wasn’t completely onboard with the whole “experimental drug” idea.

  “Well, as of right now, the only official side effects are nausea and headaches. But there have been some reports of memory loss and mild confusion.”

 

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