Creative Story: Bathtub Essay, Research Paper
Creative Story: Bathtub
andrea vilar
Johnny woke up, shivered, put on his robe over his sweats, got back got back
under the covers and went to sleep. Two hours later, the alarm by the TV woke up
a still chilly Johnny Black.
Johnny turned on the shower and used the plug from the kitchen sink to fill the
bathtub up. He got in, turned the water up till it was a little more than warm,
then lay down under the hot, pounding stream from the shower head. The water
always seemed to cool off by the time it hit the tub — maybe because of the
cool air in the room. Well, soon the room would warm up as it filled with the
hot water vapor pouring out of the glass shower.
Johnny put his hands under his head and lay back all the way so the water filled
his ears. Now he heard the shower hitting the water in the tub from underwater.
Everything seemed a lot quieter now. Johnny felt tired and dizzy and glad to be
motionless, resting, quiet. Everything felt perfect. The water landing was still
a little warm, but the water filling the tub was the perfect temperature. Johnny
couldn’t think how he could be happier — maybe if he didn’t have to go to work
in an hour, but right now that seemed a long way off.
Johnny closed his eyes and rested peacefully, slipping in and out of a half
dream of floating through warm liquid clouds.
Suddenly, Johnny felt very cold. Something was wrong. He was no longer tired,
but he couldn’t tell why. As he opened his eyes, he became aware of the fact
that the temperature around him was much cooler than it had been a moment ago –
not cold, but not the perfect, dreamy bath he had gotten used to. As soon as he
started to look around, his mind absorbed exactly what was wrong. It had been
hours since he had closed his eyes. The bathtub had overflowed a long time ago
and the bathroom floor was flooded! The carpets were soggy, and the room had a
stuffy smell to it.
Somehow, Johnny felt in no hurry to do anything. It was clear that this had gone
on so long that a few more minutes wouldn’t hurt anything. John gazed up at the
bathroom window, a skylight he had built himself years ago.There it stood, miles
above his head. Johnny suspected it was about noon. He could feel how pruned
his hands were, with wrinkles all over. He could hear scratching on the
outside of the glass. He must not have closed the door to the bathroom all the
way because now his cat was sitting on the toilet, apparently trying to get into
the flooded tub. John had a vague thought about how cats weren’t supposed to
like water as he watched the blurry shape of the cat through the fogged up
shower curtain, then he closed his eyes again.
Now, it was definitely colder. Without even opening his eyes, Johnny could see
that it was now dark. No light passed through his eyelids at all. He could feel
the cool evening air on his face, but for some reason the bath water had gotten
warmer. Johnny had been hungry in his sleep, but now that feeling was beginning
to pass. He felt curious, as though there was something he needed to think about,
but he couldn’t focus on what. He felt exhausted, unable to move or even open
his eyes. He could hear the cat actually meowing from somewhere outside the tub,
probably wanting to be fed, but there was nothing he could do for her.
He wondered how long the hot water would last. He wondered about the damage to
the carpeting in the apartment. He wished he could see the sunshine through the
skylight. He thought back to his dream about the clouds, and about how warm he
had felt then, and how warm he felt now, and how unhappy he had been when he
thought he had to go to work, and how relieved he was to find out that he had
been able to avoid it, and how peaceful he felt right now. Then, slowly, without
opening his eyes, Johnny suddenly became aware that he was floating through the
clouds again.
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