Few truly understand hatred like those of bitter rivals. I don't mean rivals, like that girl on the soccer team that has recently tied your number of goals, nor that boy you're playing that online game with, that you'll never see again in your entire like. No, I mean rivals, like Vanessa and Scarlet.
Vanessa and Scarlet had grown up together. They lived in the same upper class neighborhood. They both had considerably wealthy parents. They both were very intelligent and creative and beautiful. It was difficult to think that two girls who had everything they could want, could find room to hate on each other. But, they did. In everything, they competed, fighting tooth and nail to come out on top on whatever it was they did. Piano? The first to master every classical piece was the superior musician. Sports? The faster swim time, the favored ballet performance, was the greater.
Art, however, was Vanessa's passion. It was one of the few things that she didn't really care about competition. It was a true hobby. Something she just loved to do, for herself alone.
Except that when the two girls went to school, first year of college and they had both gone into a much revered art program. All year long, Vanessa and Scarlet painted and crafted, sculpted and drew, took pictures, made videos, and so on. They did everything, and in fact, now that they had matured, and Vanessa cared more about her passion for painting more than beating Scarlet, Scarlet seemed to also drop the desire to compete. They legitimately became friends. First year flew by, second year was lightning quick. Third year, don't blink, it would pass you.
Then, final year, and their class was to put on an art exhibit. Everyone was to put up their absolute best project on show. Vanessa did a wonderful piece of art, a painting of a woman, who stretched across three separate canvases, was resting in three different poses, yet each was connected at the shoulder, with her arm in the same position. The anchor to the piece that brought it all together. Needless to say, her Professor praised her for it.
Yet, when it came to Scarlet, whose work was simple, smaller. A painting of a woman with what looked like her head split open and something, flowers or nature or something along those lines, was pouring out from it. Vanessa thought it was cute, but it wasn't as elaborate as her own. It wasn't as well done. It didn't take as much effort. It wasn't as creative.
Later that night, when they were at the exhibit, her Professor took it on himself to usher guests towards Scarlet's work. He saw something, he said, in every inch of that work. Hours passed, and though her art was appreciated genuinely, it was overcast by Scarlet's. Vanessa had to get away, stepped into the bathroom and locked herself inside. She cried, hard.
She had given everything to this, her art, and she knew that it was merely a thing for Scarlet, nothing of great importance, just something to fill her time. Why did he see hers as better? She couldn't find an answer, and she just broke down in frustration. It had been a long time since she bawled this hard. It must have been a long time, because by the time she stepped out, everyone was gone except a single old janitor shuffling slowly through the halls. Vanessa stepped back into that room, and gazed at Scarlet's picture. That disgusting crude piece of shit. Vanessa, without considering her actions, reached into her pockets, took her car keys, and tore through the canvas paper. Once, twice, three times. Those jagged keys cut into the surface of the picture until it was mutilated, unrecognizable. Vanessa took a step back, her breathing was harsh, hallow, her face soaked in tears of frustration.
Now, her art was undoubtedly better. Nobody could disagree. |