JOSE GERVIC LABE, JR.
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Dragonstone Tablet #1070159 added April 29, 2024 at 8:17pm Restrictions: None
A Story :: Dreams in Twilight
The last sliver of orange bled from the horizon, devoured by the inky sprawl of night. Gino shivered, pulling his thin jacket tighter. The once vibrant hues of the construction site, where he'd spent the past ten years, were now reduced to stark silhouettes against the twilight. He ran a hand through his salt-and-pepper hair, the coarse texture mirroring the gravel beneath his feet.
"Another day, Gino," a voice rumbled beside him. It was Tony, the foreman, a man whose weathered face held the stories of a thousand sunrises over steel and concrete.
Gino forced a smile. "Another day," he echoed, his voice rasping.
Silence settled between them, thick with unspoken truths. The news had come that morning, a terse email announcing project completion and layoffs. Gino, the oldest on the crew, was at the top of the cut list.
"Gonna miss you around here, old man," Tony finally said, clapping him on the shoulder. The gesture was heavy with a sympathy Gino couldn't handle.
"Me too, Tony," he rasped, the words catching in his throat. He wasn't just going to miss the camaraderie, the familiar rhythm of the work. This place, this very construction site, had been the canvas of his dreams.
Years ago, Gino had envisioned himself rising through the ranks, becoming a foreman himself, maybe even starting his own small construction company. He'd poured sweat and blood into these buildings, each one a brick laid on the path to his future. Now, that future crumbled in his hand like dry mortar.
A bitter laugh escaped his lips. "Remember when we used to laugh at the old timers saying robots would take our jobs? Seemed like science fiction back then."
Tony chuckled, a low rumble. "Yeah, those were the days. But hey, look, Gino," he continued, his voice gruff but gentle, "you're a good man. You've got experience, you know the business inside and out. You'll find something."
Gino wanted to believe him. He truly did. But the doubt gnawed at him, a persistent ache mirroring the one in his knee. At 55, with a bad knee and a fading dream, the job market seemed a hostile wasteland. Back when he started, construction was booming, young men like him clambering over each other for a shot at a steady paycheck. Now, automation loomed large, a steel behemoth threatening to swallow the jobs whole.
He mumbled a goodbye and turned to leave, the silence deafening now. As he walked away, the city lights began to prickle through the gathering darkness, a million tiny reminders of a life he couldn't quite afford anymore. The sun had set on his dreams, casting long shadows across his path. But a sliver of hope, fragile as twilight, still flickered within him. He had to hold onto it, had to find a new path, a new brick to lay on the foundation of his uncertain future.
Maybe it wouldn't be a skyscraper, but it could be something. The world wasn't as black and white as the stark contrast between the fading daylight and the city lights. There were shades of gray, unexplored avenues. Perhaps he could mentor younger folks coming into the trade, passing on the wisdom he'd accumulated over the years. He could share the satisfaction of a job well done, the camaraderie of a crew working towards a shared goal. Or maybe, with his knowledge and experience, he could carve out a niche in repair and maintenance, fixing the very buildings he helped construct. The world was a vast construction site, after all, and somewhere, there had to be a place for him. It might not be the future he envisioned, bathed in the golden light of success, but it could be one built with resilience, a proof to the enduring spirit that wouldn't let a dimming dream extinguish the fire within.
Gino glanced back at the construction site, a silent farewell to a chapter of his life. He took a deep breath, the city air laced with the metallic tang of possibility. The road ahead wouldn't be easy. He might have to swallow his pride, take on a smaller role, something less physically demanding. But that didn't mean it couldn't be rewarding. He could find a way to adapt, to channel his experience into a new purpose. After all, wasn't construction all about taking raw materials and shaping them into something new? Maybe it was time to take the skills he'd honed and reshape his own future, brick by brick.
WORD COUNT: 749 Words
PROMPT: WHAT'S HIS STORY?
Prompt #9. The sun had set and so had his dreams.
THE RAVEN TASK: "Raven Task #10" |
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