Cherreads

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 The Check-in

A chair creaks under Colton's weight,

the sound sharp in the stuffy office. Somewhere above, a fluorescent light hums

and flickers, threatening to die. A pen scratches across paper, relentless, as

the city outside grumbles—a car alarm wails, then chokes into silence. Colton

slouches, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "So, what's it gonna be today, Mr.

S? You gonna ask how I'm 'processing my feelings' or just skip to the part

where you tell me to stay outta trouble?"

Mr. S sets down his coffee mug with a

soft clink, the sound swallowed by the heavy air. His voice is calm, but

there's a faint edge of amusement, like he's playing a game only he

understands. "Colton, I've been doing this long enough to know you don't process

shit. You just stew in it. But let's humor the system, yeah? How's school?

Still getting into fights?"

Colton snorts, the sound sharp and

bitter. His sneakers scuff the linoleum floor as he shifts. "School's a fucking

circus. You know that. Got jumped by Derek and his goons behind the gym last

week. Two on one. Still got a bruise the size of Texas on my ribs." His voice

hardens, like steel settling into place. "Didn't back down, though. Never do."

Mr. S's chair groans as he leans

forward, the wood protesting. His voice drops, almost like he's talking to

himself. "Never do…" Then louder, "And that's why your principal's got my

number on speed dial. You're a magnet for trouble, kid. Always have been. Ever

since I took your case after your dad passed."

Colton's breath catches, a sharp hiss.

His fingers drum on the armrest, a restless tap-tap-tap. "Yeah, well, trouble

finds me." His laugh is bitter, scraping the air. "Ain't like I go looking for

it. Besides, what else am I supposed to do? Let 'em walk all over me? Not my

style."

The room smells of stale cigarettes

and cheap pine air freshener, the kind that clings to your throat. Outside, a

dog barks, sharp and distant, cutting through the city's low hum. Mr. S sighs,

the sound heavy with patience. "I get it, Colton. I do. But you're almost 17

now. A few more days, and the state's not gonna care if you're getting your ass

kicked or not. You gotta start thinking about what's next. Your mom's killing

herself working two jobs to keep you and Bella fed. You wanna make her life

harder?"

Colton's voice drops, defensive.

"Don't bring her into this. Mom's… doing what she can. Always has." His words

soften, like he's swallowing glass. "Ain't her fault we're stuck in this

shithole, me and Bella sharing a room like we're camping in a closet."

Mr. S leans back, his chair creaking

again, slower this time. "Nobody's saying it's her fault. Or yours. But you're

not making it easier, either. Talk to me, Colton. What's going on in that head

of yours? You're turning seventeen in a few days. Big milestone. Any plans?"

Colton scoffs, the sound dripping with

disdain. "Plans? Yeah, maybe I'll throw a party at the dump. Invite the

roaches. Real fancy shit." His voice drops, quieter, rawer. "Birthdays ain't

exactly a celebration around here. Just another day Mom's gotta scrape by, and

Bella's stuck drawing me shitty cards 'cause we can't afford nothing else."

The pen stops scratching, leaving a

thick silence. Mr. S's chair shifts, a faint squeak as he leans forward again.

His voice is careful, like he's stepping around a minefield. "You ever think

about your dad on your birthday?"

Colton's breath hitches, a quick,

sharp sound. His voice turns bitter, jagged. "What's that got to do with

anything? You wanna dig up old wounds, Mr. S? Fine. Yeah, I think about him.

Hard not to when Mom gets that look in her eyes every year. Like she's seeing a

ghost." His voice cracks, just a little. "He was gone before I really knew him.

Just… poof. Dead at twenty-three. Car accident, they said. Drunk driver." He

mutters, the words venomous. "Fucking bullshit."

Mr. S's fingers tap lightly on the

desk, a steady rhythm. His voice stays measured, probing. "You don't believe it

was an accident."

Colton's chair scrapes as he leans

forward, his voice rising, angry. "You read the file, right? You tell me. Guy's

driving home from work, middle of the day, and some asshole plows into him? No

witnesses, no real investigation. Just 'wrong place, wrong time.'" He scoffs,

the sound harsh. "Sounds like a cover-up to me. Mom won't talk about it. Says

it's too hard. But I know she thinks something's off too."

Mr. S's voice softens, thoughtful,

like he's weighing every word. "You've got a sharp mind, Colton. Always have.

But you gotta be careful where you point it. Sometimes the truth's messier than

you want it to be."

"Messy's my life, man." Colton's laugh

is dark, hollow. "Been that way since I was seven. Dad's gone, Mom's barely

holding it together, and I'm out here getting my face smashed in for existing."

His voice drops, raw and quiet. "You ever lose someone, Mr. S? Someone who

mattered?"

The fluorescent light buzzes faintly,

filling the pause. Mr. S's voice, when he speaks, is low, almost reverent, like

he's carrying a weight too heavy for the room. "Yeah, kid. I've lost people.

More than you'd believe. And I've watched others lose everything. It's… a heavy

thing. But you? You're still here. Still fighting. That's something."

Colton's laugh is bitter, but it

softens at the edges. "Fighting's all I got. Kevin's the only one who's got my

back, and even he thinks I'm a lost cause half the time." He pauses, his voice

barely above a whisper. "I just… I don't know, man. Sometimes I feel like

there's something bigger out there. Like I'm supposed to be… more. You ever

feel that?"

Mr. S's chair creaks as he shifts, the

sound deliberate. His voice carries a strange intensity, like he's holding back

a secret. "More than you know, Colton. More than you know." He clears his

throat, the sound abrupt. "Look, your birthday's coming up. Seventeen's a big

deal. Maybe it's a chance to turn things around. Start fresh."

Colton snorts, his sneakers scuffing

the floor again. "Yeah, sure. I'll just wake up on Saturday, magically not a

screw-up anymore. Maybe I'll get a cake with 'Prometheus' written on it in big,

sparkly letters." His laugh is dark, edged with pain. "That's what Dad used to

call me, you know. His little Prometheus. Said I'd light up the world someday.

Guess he didn't know I'd just be setting fires instead."

Mr. S's voice drops, almost to

himself, like he's tasting the word. "Prometheus, huh? That's… quite a name.

You know what it means?"

Colton shrugs, the motion rustling his

jacket. "Some Greek myth shit. Guy who stole fire for humans, got chained to a

rock for it. Real uplifting story."

Mr. S's fingers stop tapping, and his

voice turns intense, almost urgent. "Uplifting… or a warning. You're not wrong,

though. Prometheus was a protector. A rebel. Took on the gods themselves to

give humanity a chance. That's a hell of a legacy to carry."

Colton snorts, but it's quieter now,

less certain. "Yeah, well, I ain't exactly stealing fire from gods, am I?

Unless you count the time I accidentally set off the fire alarm in chem class."

His voice softens, heavy with doubt. "Dad believed in me, though. That's what

Mom says. Said I was gonna be something special. Kinda hard to believe when

you're eating ramen for the third night in a row."

The clock on the wall ticks loudly,

each second a hammer strike. Mr. S leans back, his chair groaning under the

shift. His voice is firm, almost commanding. "You're tougher than you think,

Colton. And maybe… just maybe… your dad wasn't wrong." He pauses, the silence

thick. "Time's up for today. You stay out of trouble until your birthday, yeah?

I'll check in with you next week."

Colton stands, his chair scraping the

floor. His voice is flat, but there's a crack in it, a flicker of something

softer. "Yeah, sure. No promises." He pauses at the door, his hand on the knob,

the metal cold under his palm. "Thanks, Mr. S. For, you know… not giving up on

me."

Mr. S's voice is soft, almost too

soft, like a vow. "Never will, kid. Never will."

The door creaks open, then slams shut,

the sound echoing down the hallway. Colton's footsteps fade, swallowed by the

city's pulse—car horns, distant sirens, the grind of a world that doesn't care.

But as he walks away, a faint hum lingers in his chest, like a spark waiting to

catch fire.

More Chapters