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Chapter 1 - The New town blue

Chapter 1

The New Town Blues

 

Jack had lost count of how many cities he'd lived in. Every

time he got used to one place, his father's job whisked them away to another. A

different town, a different school, different faces—same loneliness. Fifteen

years old and already an expert at starting over, though he hated it more each

time.

 

Their latest house sat on a quiet street lined with sleepy

trees and empty sidewalks. It was bigger than the last, with a backyard that

Jack's mom called "a painter's dream." She was an artist, always seeing the

beauty in things others overlooked. Jack saw the house differently—silent

hallways, blank walls, and windows that framed a world he didn't belong to.

 

His father was rarely home, always off managing one branch

or another. His mom, sweet and distracted, spent most of her time preparing for

exhibitions. And Liam, his older brother... Well, Liam had mastered the art of

ignoring him. Despite taking the same bus to school and college—their campuses

were practically neighbors—Liam kept a safe distance, like Jack was just

another forgettable face in the crowd.

 

Jack tried not to care. But when Liam laughed with his

college friends at the bus stop, all confident and bright, and Jack stood in

silence clutching his sketchbook like a shield, it stung.

 

The first day of school was no different than the others.

The moment he entered the classroom, eyes turned. Some curious. Some cruel. He

didn't speak much—there wasn't a point. His teachers didn't bother learning his

name properly, and the kids decided within minutes that he was "weird."

 

Lunchtime was the worst. Alone on the farthest bench in the

courtyard, Jack picked at his food, wishing he could fade into the brick wall

behind him. The bullies found him quickly. They always did.

 

"Hey, you the new loser?" one of them asked with a smirk.

Jack didn't answer. He never did.

 

"You mute or something?"

 

Still silence.

 

"Look at this freak and his sketchbook. What are you

drawing, fairyland?"

 

They grabbed the book from his hands. Pages flipped,

revealing intricate drawings—twisted trees, haunted skies, delicate figures

cloaked in stardust. His private world, exposed.

 

One boy held it up. "What the hell is this? Art class

princess?"

 

Jack lunged for the book, his voice finally cracking out.

"Give it back!"

 

Laughter. Someone shoved him. His back hit the bench. He

didn't cry—he never did. He just picked up his sketchbook, brushed off the

dirt, and walked away.

 

That night, Jack sat at his desk, staring at the glowing

blue tree outside the window. It stood tall and strange in the moonlight,

blossoms shimmering like something from one of his drawings. His mom had

planted it when they moved in, saying it brought "peace to the soul."

 

Peace. Jack had forgotten what that felt like.

 

Downstairs, his parents talked in tired voices about bills

and work. Adrian laughed over the phone with someone Jack would never meet.

Alone in his room, Jack opened his sketchbook and drew a new tree—taller than

all the rest, its branches winding into the stars. He drew a boy beneath it,

small and still, staring up as if waiting for something… or someone.

 

He didn't know that night that the tree was listening.

 

And that soon, someone would answer.

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