Freshwater Literary Journal 2021

Page 104

Zach Murphy 437 Wilton Street (A Brick Story) Charlie’s wistful heart tingles as he pulls up to 437 Wilton Street, the apartment building from his childhood. Everything is gone but the skeleton of a structure and the echoes of Charlie’s memories. You can board up the windows, but you can’t cross out the souls that once occupied the walls. Every Saturday night, the entire block would light up with a Fourth of July jubilance. Dueling music speakers battled to steal the humid air at full volume. The Ramones shouted to the rooftop. Bruce Springsteen crooned to the moon. And Sam Cooke sang to the heavens. Out in the street, Rich used to show off his candy red Mustang. Rich thought he was a lot cooler than he actually was. His hair grease looked like a mixture of egg yolks and cement. Charlie hasn’t forgotten the time that Rich revved up his ride in front of the whole neighborhood, only to blow the engine. As everybody laughed, Rich’s face blushed redder than his broken car. Shawn was the tallest human that Charlie had ever seen. He dribbled the basketball on the bubblegum-stained concrete like he had the world in his hands. He never did make it to the pros, though. But he did become a pro of another kind. Charlie hadn’t heard about Shawn in years until the day a familiar voice spoke through the television. It was a commercial for a landscaping business— aptly named Shawn’s Professional Landscaping. Charlie wished that he were older. Then, maybe he might’ve gotten noticed by his first crush, Henrietta. He’d often daydream about her curly hair, sparkly lip gloss, and mysterious eyes. Sometimes when Charlie passed by her door, he’d hear loud yelling and harsh bangs. Wherever she is now, he hopes that she’s safe and happy. TJ always treated Charlie like a little brother. He’d even give him extra cash for snacks every single week. Charlie always admired TJ’s bright red Nike shoes. One day, TJ got arrested by the cops in front of Charlie’s very own eyes. It turned out that TJ was selling a certain kind of product, and it wasn’t chocolates. Charlie’s grandma cooked the most delicious spaghetti. It smelled like love. The sauce was made from fresh tomatoes that she grew on the building’s rooftop. Charlie still thinks of her sweet smile with the missing front tooth, and the big, dark moles on her cheeks. The cancer eventually got to her. When she was put to rest, Charlie was forced to go into a new home. But it wasn’t really a home. The memories from that place are the ones that Charlie permanently boarded up in his mind. After snapping out of his trance, Charlie picks up a decrepit brown brick from the building and sets it on the passenger side floor of his pristine Cadillac. When he arrives back at his quaint house in a quiet neighborhood, he places the brick in the soil of his tomato garden and smiles. 104


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Contributors

21min
pages 148-157

James K. Zimmerman

2min
pages 144-147

Chila Woychik

4min
pages 142-143

Diane Woodcock

0
page 141

Shelby Wilson

1min
pages 139-140

Charles R. Vermilyea Jr

6min
pages 135-138

Kelly Talbot

6min
pages 131-133

Eugene Stevenson

1min
page 130

Steve Straight

1min
pages 128-129

Matthew J. Spireng

1min
pages 125-127

Susan Winters Smith

0
page 124

Richard Smith

0
page 123

John Sheirer

6min
pages 117-119

Edythe Haendel Schwartz

0
page 116

Harvey Silverman

6min
pages 120-122

Natalie Schriefer

0
page 115

Ruth Pagano

3min
pages 107-108

S.E. Page

2min
pages 109-111

Elise O’Reilly

0
pages 105-106

Wood Reede

2min
page 112

Zach Murphy

2min
page 104

Rosemary Dunn Moeller

2min
pages 98-100

John Muro

1min
pages 101-103

Joan McNerney

0
pages 96-97

DS Maolalai

1min
pages 94-95

Sarah Leslie

0
page 92

Christopher Linforth

0
page 93

Tom Lagasse

1min
pages 89-91

Genevieve Jaser

1min
page 86

John Lambremont

0
page 88

James Croal Jackson

0
page 84

Jessica Handly

7min
pages 80-82

Lee Grossman

6min
pages 73-75

Pat Hale

0
page 76

Ruth Holzer

1min
pages 77-79

John Grey

2min
pages 70-72

Dave Gregory

2min
page 69

Dave Fromm

5min
pages 63-65

Taylor Graham

1min
pages 66-68

Nikki Friedman

0
page 62

Michael Estabrook

1min
pages 60-61

Josef Desade

1min
page 58

Timothy Dodd

0
page 59

Steve Denehan

0
page 57

Macy Delasco

5min
pages 55-56

Susanne Davis

7min
pages 50-53

Holly Day

1min
page 54

Mason Croft

5min
pages 48-49

Shannon Cuthbert

0
page 47

Jamie Crepeau

1min
pages 44-46

Joe Cottonwood

2min
pages 41-43

Peter Neil Carroll

2min
pages 39-40

Melanie Brooks

1min
page 36

Katley Demetria Brown

0
page 37

Gaylord Brewer

3min
pages 34-35

Ace Boggess

0
pages 32-33

Paul Beckman

1min
page 29

Callie S. Blackstone

0
page 31

Kara Barsalou

0
page 28

Cathy Barber

1min
pages 26-27

Dee Allen

1min
pages 23-24

Sarah Martin

7min
pages 10-12

Emily Schwartz

8min
pages 19-22

Luiz Emanuel de Castro Moura

4min
pages 17-18

Victoria Orifice

4min
pages 15-16

Susan Winters Smith

7min
pages 7-9

Amanda Fahy

3min
pages 13-14

Freshwater Student Writing Contest

3min
pages 4-6

Information

1min
pages 1-3
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