Sunday, October 13, 2019
What Really Counts :: essays research papers
Some stories start out slowly. Some start quickly. Some, unfortunately never start at all. It was the latter that was slowly becoming the bane ââ¬â or, as he saw it, the description -- of Morgan Duboisââ¬â¢ existence. Granted, his story was slow in forming not because of lack of effort or desire on his own part, but fizzled time and time again due to an enormous lack of cooperation from the outside world. The outside world, of course, being girls. Standing a modest six feet, two inches in height and tipping the scales at one hundred and eighty-five pounds, Morgan Debois wasnââ¬â¢t that demanding of attention, and his brown hair and hazel eyes ââ¬â maddeningly typical, in his eyes -- did nothing to change that, much to his chagrin. Though not unattractive, Morgan never fancied himself good-looking, and though he wasnââ¬â¢t a heartthrob, girls never seemed to notice him, either. Unlike many other teenage boys, though, he found little solace on the athletic fields or courts of the high school scene. He wasnââ¬â¢t gifted in any real sense of the word, he thought. Made and played on the basketball team but never started, and with a few minor exceptions and headlines from a sectional championship relief pitching performance his junior year, the same went for football and baseball. Even Morgan himself didnââ¬â¢t take much from his athletic prowess, if one could call it that; when youââ¬â¢re a kid of above-average h eight in a school population numbering barely 170 ââ¬â if all the Jarrett kids were there, the running joke was ââ¬â you damn sure better play something, or youââ¬â¢re a queer. You were weak. Though heââ¬â¢d willingly concede the fact that he was nondescript and perhaps all but invisible to the girls he fancied, Morgan Dubois was no queer. He wasnââ¬â¢t weak. And though the thought never crossed his mind, for fear of the attention he sometimes so desperately craved, Morgan Dubois damn sure wouldnââ¬â¢t tolerate you thinking he was. And that declaration, though unmade as of yet, is where Morganââ¬â¢s story, and ours, truly begins. Iââ¬â¢ve got to tell you, I saw it coming. *** Solly Jarrett, on the other hand, was. He was weak. And heââ¬â¢d be the first one to admit it. The youngest ââ¬â by six minutes; his twin sister Holly nearly edged him out for the honors ââ¬â of eight children, Solly was raised in a household that had seen enough achievements, both scholastic and athletic, that he wasnââ¬â¢t going to get much more than a ââ¬Ëgood luckââ¬â¢ from Mom or Dad whenever he got dropped off at school or the baseball field.
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