A Good Life

They clung to life. The only strength left in their body was channeled into the desperate grip of the fingers that held fast to this world.

Theirs was a life of the greatest opulence. They had wanted more and more, so they had taken it. It had been easy for them to look past the adage “of whom much is given, much is expected.” They’d been too busy enjoying their lavish life to think about what might be expected of them. They had never stopped to understand that no matter the great amounts of wealth and things they accumulated, they would still end up in the same place as those whose backs they broke in their efforts to accumulate more.

They had spent their money on age-defying tonics and treatments, doing everything they could to ward of the ravages of time. It came for them sooner than most.

None of the tinctures and remedies could touch their soul, and the soul is what keeps the ultimate score. As their luxurious extremes grew, their soul blackened as each day slipped away. 

It began as small cracks in their façade – a hitch in their step, a cough, a moment of blurred vision – but grew with the passing of time. The cracks became deeper faults. Their hair fell out, they lost the vision in one eye, and were always ill.

It should be said, they were not bad, just oblivious to the destruction their opulence caused the world around them or within themselves. They never calculated the cost of their excesses; never understood the sum of everything always ended as nothing.

They never nurtured their soul, and it left them. Their major mistake– the one of so many – was to believe living the ‘good life’ was the same as living a good life. 

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Judgement

They surged at the fence line trying to get their piece of Ty. He felt a variety of hands tugging at his shirt, arms, anything they could grasp. The exploding flashes of cameras and the large lights set up by the networks were blinding. 

Questions erupted from all corners along with the inevitable declarations of adoration. Everyone shouting about love. He tried to keep his expression blank, but couldn’t keep a smile from twitching at the corner of his mouth.

If they knew where his mind was, they’d be surprised. That’s what caused the hint of a smile. He wasn’t there with them. He didn’t see them. Instead, his mind was on the water. He was sitting on the weather-beaten wood of the deck, legs dangling off the side, watching as the summer sun burned its way down to the horizon. 

It was so quiet there. The night sounds of the forest were beginning to creep in as the lapping of the waves began to take minds towards sleep, but there was no constant press of sound. It wasn’t the city. Instead of being lost in a mass of humanity, concrete and noise, one could get lost in the silence. It stretched on as far as the ear could hear. It’s why he went awayin his mind.

What surrounded him now was chaos. If his mind were present, he would have shook his head at the madness of it all. These people were vultures searching for footage to add to their unfounded hot takes or else trying to create their own 15 minutes of fame. 

He didn’t want it to register. He couldn’t let it register. Ty was about to be judged by a jury of his “peers,” and if he thought too hard about them, he’d lose hope.

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Code

They offered him more money than he’d ever thought he’d earn in a year to stay. He was flattered and told them so. It was too late. 

He hadn’t given them everything, but over the last 20 years he’d given them more than the majority of his peers. He would have given more, but no one had listened. Nobody was asking for ideas, there was no place to submit them, so he sat on his. He figured they were his biggest contribution to the company, but they didn’t come to light until it was too late.

After he’d submitted his resignation to his boss, he wrote a letter to the President and CEO. He’d explained his thoughts on the company’s future and thanked them for the opportunity. He was himself: polite, professional, non-descript. Neither responded.

On his second to last day, the President called and asked him if he’d be willing to expand upon his ideas. They had a pleasant chat that lasted two hours. He didn’t think anything more of it. He’d enjoyed the chance to share his ideas, but that was that.

The next morning the Vice President of HR called with an offer that would quintuple his pay and grant him a powerful new title. He was grateful, but declined. He’d made a commitment and he didn’t turn his back on those.

The President and CEO both called him in the afternoon begging him to stay. He was polite, but steadfast in his refusal. He had a code.

He spent a pleasant weekend with his family. The children laughed in the yard. The fading sunlight caught his wife’s hair and he fell in love with her all over again. There was no talk of work.

On Monday, he went to work at his old company’s largest competitor.

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