Categories
Kiley's Stories

Flight 4357

ACT ONE

(The stage is barely lit, the curtain down. White noise crackles through the speakers, getting steadily louder. The familiar ding of the fasten seatbelt sign turning on/off echoes once or twice. The noise grows louder and louder until finally …)

ELIAS: Is there a doctor on board? (Curtain up. JACOB lies in the aisle, front and center, with multiple passengers and flight attendants hovering over him. Frantic shouts echo the call for a doctor.)

RAFAEL: (Enters stage right) I’m a doctor, please, let me through. (Reaches the unconscious man.) What’s going on?

ELIAS: I don’t know, I think he’s having a seizure or something.

RAFAEL: Is anyone traveling with him?

ELIAS: Does anyone know this man? His name is (pulls open the man’s wallet and reads) Jacob Young. (Passengers respond with blank stares, shaking heads. A baby cries.)

SASHA: I’ll make an announcement on the intercom. (Exits stage left)

RAFAEL: I need to lay him on his side, clear the aisle please. (People hesitate, barely moving)

ELIAS: (loudly) All right, everyone out of the way, let the doctor help. (Everyone shuffles out of the way, whispering frantically. RAFAEL turns JACOB on his side so he’s facing upstage.)

SASHA (offstage, over intercom): Hello everyone, take note that the fasten seatbelt sign is on. Please remain in your seats while we handle a medical emergency. (Everyone on stage slowly returns to their seats, all except RAFAEL and ELIAS. Everyone cranes their necks and stands up every once and while to get a better look.) If anyone on board is traveling with Jacob Young, please report to row 26, thank you.

RAFAEL: Someone give me a jacket, pillow, blanket, anything soft that I can put under his head.

ISABELLA: (quickly rummages through her things and hands RAFAEL a small neck pillow) Will this work?

RAFAEL: It’ll have to. (Offstage, CARRIE shouts frantically, getting louder as she draws nearer and finally enters stage right.)

CARRIE: … that’s my husband, please (she sees JACOB on the ground) … Oh my god! What’s wrong with him, what’s happening to my husband?

RAFAEL: Ma’am, please calm down, now tell us, does your husband have epilepsy or some kind of medical condition that might have caused this?

CARRIE: No, no, Jacob’s perfectly healthy, he runs marathons, he coaches our son’s basketball team … Oh my god, what the hell is the matter with him?

RAFAEL: (Stares intently down at JACOB, visibly puzzled) He’s foaming at the mouth … Ma’am, what’s your name?

CARRIE: I- I- it’s C-Carrie, Carrie Young.

RAFAEL: All right, Carrie, I’m Rafael, I’m a doctor. Now, has Jacob consumed any alcohol or drugs on this trip?

CARRIE: What? What does that have to do—look, no, we just came to Arizona to visit his mom, but we’re with our kids.

ELIAS: Well, you two were sitting separately, is it possible he consumed any when you weren’t around?

CARRIE: I mean … I guess it’s possible, but we only split up because for some reason the kids and I got a free upgrade to first class, otherwise we’ve been together the whole trip. (JACOB stops seizing. CARRIE breathes a sigh of relief.) Is it over, is he okay? (RAFAEL places two fingers on JACOB’s neck.)

RAFAEL: I’m not feeling a pulse. Elias, bring me the defibrillation kit! Starting chest compressions. (RAFAEL turns JACOB onto his back. ELIAS exits stage left.)

CARRIE: What do you mean there’s no pulse? (She collapses and holds JACOB’s head as RAFAEL starts CPR.) Jacob, Jake, please, you have to be okay, you have to come back home with us.

ELIAS: (Frantically rushes back onstage with SASHA) It’s not there, the defibrillation kit is gone!

RAFAEL: What? What do you mean it’s gone? (RAFAEL begins to lose his cool, though he continues CPR throughout.)

ELIAS: I-I don’t know, somebody removed it from the wall, it’s not there.

RAFAEL: Well, get the backup kit!

SASHA: (Beat.) There is no backup kit.

CARRIE: Somebody do something, please, my husband is dying!

RAFAEL: Fuck! (Beat. Then, he tries to regain his composure.) Okay, we need to land this plane.

ELIAS: I’ve notified the pilot that we have a Code Red, she’s attempting an emergency landing at the nearest airfield.

RAFAEL: Good, make sure they have EMS on the ground ready for us to arrive. (Turns to the rest of the passengers) Does anyone else here know CPR? (Beat.)

ISABELLA: Um, I-I was a lifeguard in high school.

RAFAEL: Okay, good, anyone else? (CARRIE sobs noisily, still clutching tight to JACOB.) Fine, okay, lifeguard, come over here please. (ISABELLA moves past the other passengers and makes her way to JACOB’s feet.) What’s your name?

ISABELLA: Isabella.

RAFAEL: It’s nice to meet you, Isabella, I’m Rafael. Okay, I’m gonna need you to take over for me in a second here so I can talk to (quickly looks up at ELIAS to read his nametag) Elias. Can you do that for me?

ISABELLA: I-I think so.

CARRIE: You think so?

ISABELLA: (To CARRIE) No, I can do it, (To RAFAEL) I can do it, I swear. (RAFAEL switches places with ISABELLA and she begins chest compressions. RAFAEL rises and pulls ELIAS downstage, out of earshot of the rest of the passengers.)

RAFAEL: Elias, I am about to tell you something, and I need you not to react in any way. (They both glance over at the gaggle of passengers.)

ELIAS: Okay …

RAFAEL: The foaming mouth, the seizing, the heart stopping … these things don’t add up to a normal medical diagnosis or condition. But they do indicate something else.

ELIAS: (Trying to keep a straight face) What exactly do they indicate?

RAFAEL: Poison.

(Thunder echoes across stage. The video projection transforms to show dark, tumultuous clouds. The lights flicker on and off and all the passengers begin to shake. The plane is going through some serious turbulence. Chaos ensues, people begin to shout. The baby starts crying again.)

ISABELLA: Rafael, I need help!

CARRIE: Please come stop this girl from killing my husband!

ELIAS: Everyone, please remain calm and in your seats.

(RAFAEL and ELIAS rush back to JACOB. Shouting and screaming ensues, the white noise from the beginning of the show returns, everything continues to build in volume and intensity until suddenly … it all stops. Everyone is frozen on stage in their various positions except for SASHA. She holds a burner cellphone up to her ear on far stage left. She has a sinister smile on her face that makes the audience realize in an instant that she’s the bad guy here.)

SASHA: (In a non-English accent, preferably Russian) It is finished. (Beat.) No, of course not. You know I’m the best at what I do. Even better than … what did he call himself this time? Ah, yes … even better than Jacob Young.

END OF PLAY

Categories
Kiley's Stories

Part I: The Mirror

The mirror startled her. She did not see it right away, not until she had already gone several steps past it. Her inability to immediately recognize the mirror was not simply a lack of awareness; rather, she was totally enriched in the book in her hands and, looking down to read it, did not realize at first what she was passing. Then, out of the corner of her eye, she glimpsed what looked like a shadow. This made her jump and spin about wildly, trying to see who was following her. (One would normally not be so afraid of a shadow, especially when that shadow is quite conceivably one’s own shadow. However, she was the kind of girl who had reason to be afraid of her own shadow, so we shall forgive for this seemingly absurd reaction.)

She soon realized it was not a shadow at all, and it was certainly not a murderous stalker following her across the field. The field was nearly always empty at this time of day, which is why the girl used it as a shortcut on her way home from school. Later on, it would be filled with children kicking soccer balls and parents watching from a respectable distance while they sipped coffee and had internal crises and teenagers holding hands and talking about things they pretended mattered. For now, though, the field next to her house was empty. Empty except for the mirror.

She retreated and turned to face the mirror, staring into it. It was a full-length mirror with an oak trim, standing on its oak legs in the middle of the soccer field. There was nothing else around it, no inscription, nothing hanging on the mirror, no apparent purpose. Besides the fact that it was placed in the middle of an empty field, there was nothing else extraordinary about this particular mirror. Oh, except for the fact that it was not her reflection in the mirror.

At least, it was not her current reflection. The her in the mirror was not wearing unripped jeans and an oversized, hand-knitted sweater that her Grams had given her. The her in the mirror did not have a captivating book in her hands. The her in the mirror did not have her dreadlocks pulled back into a long, subdued ponytail. The her in the mirror looked nothing like the her in the field, and yet somehow, instinctively, she knew that she was looking at her future self.

She almost dropped her book in surprise (the key word being almost). The version of her in the mirror smiled mischievously, pleased to see that her more tangible counterpart had figured out that they were one in the same. She (the her in the mirror that is) was taller and curvier, and she wore contacts instead of large navy-framed glasses. Her dreads, a handful of which were colored electric blue, fell prettily around her mature face, a face where confidence—but not arrogance—lingered wistfully.

Standing before the mirror, the girl did not have any of these things. But still… their noses were twins, their eyes a perfect match, their cheekbones cut in the same fashion, their skin tones an identical rich brown—though the older she wore a fitted black tank top that showcased far more muscular arms than the ones hidden beneath the white sweater.

The she in the field stared hungrily at this version of herself. She was confused and scared, of course, but she was too intrigued to be hung up on those unpleasant feelings. Did this mirror show the future? Did it show a long-lost sister? Or her mother when she was young, before she died?

No, she thought. She is me and I am her. There could be no question about that. How then, is she in there while I’m out here? The her in the mirror, unfortunately, did not answer. She continued to smile that mischievous, tantalizing smile, as if she knew something which the her in the field did not. (The truth of matter, of course, is that she knew many things the she in the field did not, but the she in the field was not to be made aware of this fact quite yet.)

“How can I get to you?” she asked herself, desperate for some direction or sign.

To her surprise, the her in the mirror answered. Not with words, for no words of wisdom can be handed down from future self to past self (this much history has taught us). No, the her in the mirror answered with a gesture. She lifted her hand and beckoned, urging the her in the field to come her way.

She was confused. How could she go to the her in the mirror? Did she mean to walk forward, past the mirror, and continue in that direction? Or did she mean…

The question had not yet been fully formed when the answer arrived. The she in the field had reached out her hand to feel the solid glass that separated her from her alternate self, but it was not solid glass at all. It felt more like a thin sheet of rubber, not completely fluid, but still flexible enough to succumb to her touch. In an instant her hand had broken through the mirror (though no glass shattered), and the image of her had become distorted and blurry. Still, the she who was half in the field and half in the mirror thought she saw the she in the mirror wink before, with no warning, she vanished.

This time, she dropped the book. She stood completely still, fighting off panic as she looked at her entire left hand inside the mirror. It sent a strange buzzing feeling throughout her entire body. She looked around, but still the field was empty. There were no kicking children nor drinking parents nor talking teenagers nor knitting grandmothers. It was only her and the mirror.

With one hand, she tightened the straps of her backpack and closed her eyes. There’s no going back now, she told herself. (She was indeed right about this. If she had tried to pull her hand out of the mirror, it would have been futile.) She took a deep breath, opened her eyes, and plunged headfirst into the mirror, pushing against the rubbery surface until it gave. The moment it did her whole body followed, and she vanished…as did the oak mirror.

The book lay dirtied and forgotten in the damp grass.

Categories
Kiley's Stories Prompts

The Man and the Mammoth

Prompt: Tell the story of this image.

He was so close—yet so far. 

There, mere steps in front of him, was the monstrous creature who had killed his family. The beast who had mauled children before their parents’ eyes, ripped every man and woman to shreds, trampled an entire village with no mercy. This ruthless being had destroyed their home, and now the man and his small band of hunting partners were face to face with the reprehensible creature at last. Not only would they extract their revenge, but they would have a proper meal for the first time in weeks. The beast charged ahead, and the man pursued. He could get his revenge. He could help their souls be at peace. He just needed to throw his spear. 

The mammoth charged away, but he did not fear death. He simply wanted to die somewhere else, not in this lonesome place. It was for this reason he had come out of hiding, emerged from the woods and allowed the hunters to see him, to follow. He knew they were, like he had been, driven by rage and that they would not stop. It was precisely for this reason he hoped they would follow him right into the cave. The cave where the bones of his family lay still and solemn. The bones which had been picked clean by these very men. He once was vengeful; now, however, he merely wished for death to come and for his bones to lie beside theirs in the cave. He just had to get there. The cave came into view. The mammoth charged ahead, and the hunters pursued. He could die in peace. He could die with them. He just needed to reach his cave. 

The man threw his spear. There was hatred in his heart and his aim was true. The beast fell.  

The mammoth felt his spear. There was sadness in his heart and his loneliness was palpable. The animal fell. He fell a stone’s throw away from the cave. 

He was so close—yet so far. 

Categories
Kiley's Stories

And to All a Good Night (Part 4/4)

“All right, young man. Are you ready to go?” Santa asks.

“No, thank you. I think I’ll stay here for the night.”

“Why, are you sure, Michael? That would be very selfless of you.” Santa smiles knowingly at the little boy next to him.

“Yeah, I’m sure. Besides, I really shouldn’t leave my sister locked in the pantry all night. If I did, we probably wouldn’t have any food left for Christmas dinner.”

Santa guffaws noisily with his hand over his jiggling belly. “Yes, Michael, it’s probably best if you let Diana out of the closet.”

Michael nods, and hops down from the sleigh. For the first time he notices how cold he is, especially with the rooftop covered in snow. “Thank you for everything Santa. I better get back inside before I freeze.”

“You’re quite welcome, Michael.” Santa replies, his eyes twinkling. “And enjoy your presents tomorrow morning. “

Michael gasps. “You’re still giving me gifts?”

“Why, of course! It’s okay to make mistakes, Michael.” The little boy beams up at Santa before the old man goes on, more sternly. “However, I need you to do a few things for me.” Michael nods rapidly, ready for whatever instructions he might receive.

“Number one, never kidnap me again.” Santa’s lips twitch slightly as he says this, secretly amused by Michael’s plot to see the North Pole.“Number two,” he continues, “Make sure your mom and dad put milk into my cup. I can handle eggnog, but not whatever that stuff was.” Santa says this last part more to himself than to Michael, shivering slightly as he remembers the bitter surprise that met his lips when he took that first sip. “And number three: be kind to your sister. Twins are very special, and you should always look out for one another no matter what.”

Michael looks up sheepishly and asks, “Even when she’s being annoying?”

Santa chuckles, his belly wiggling as he booms, “Ho ho ho! Yes, Michael, even when she’s being annoying.”

“Okay, I guess that’s fair.” Michael concedes, rolling his eyes slightly. Then, he grins, taking one last look at Saint Nick. “Thanks again, Mr. Claus.”

“You’re welcome Michael. Now, go let your sister out and go to bed. I have a feeling you two are in for a wonderful Christmas morning.”

Michael beams, then makes his way over to the chimney. He looks into its dark depths, prays that he doesn’t end up with two broken legs, and jumps. Just like before, he lands softly and magically in an instant. Michael leaves the fireplace behind, slightly disappointed but still proud of himself. As he approaches the pantry door, Michael prepares himself for all the talking he’s about to do in order to avoid a whirlwind of pain. Sure enough, as soon as the doors open, Diana jumps to  her feet and gets up in Michael’s face.

“Diana, before you kill me, just listen. I didn’t go to the North Pole but Santa promised to still give us presents and he said that he wants us to go to bed so I think we should do what the old man says.”

Diana pauses for a moment, her fists still poised and lips still pursed. Then, she relaxes and reluctantly drops her fists. “You’re lucky I want to stay on the nice list.” With that, Diana wraps her arm around Michael’s shoulder and gives him a slight smile. Michael sighs in relief.

“Merry Christmas, Diana.”

Slowly and quietly, Diana and Michael make their way back up the spiral staircase, down the long hallway, and into their room. Instead of climbing up to the top bunk, Michael snuggles up next to Diana. They whisper excitedly for a few minutes, but fall silent when their minds begin racing too fast for their words. And then…

Click. Clack. Click. Clack.

“Are those–”

“I think they might be–”

“Reindeer!” The twins jump up and cross the room to look out the window. For a moment, the view looks the same as ever; a dark street lined with cars and sleds forgotten in front yards. Then suddenly, they see him—Santa Claus—soaring across the sea of stars. Eight reindeer pull him along, an iconic shadow etched across the canvas of the moon. Although Santa and the reindeer are far from the Hardy twins and their window, his booming voice echoes across the neighborhood.

“Ho ho ho! Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!”

Categories
Kiley's Stories

And to All a Good Night (Part 3/4)

Michael watches eagerly as Santa opens the fireplace doors and retreats into the fireplace itself. Suddenly, Kris Kringle vanishes, as if he were never there. Michael’s jaw drops. He follows where Santa just was, placing his bare feet in the same position as the jolly man’s jingle-belled boots. Bracing himself, Michael squeezes his eyes shut.

Whoosh. Michael opens his eyes to find himself on the roof, next to the chimney. His jaw drops once more, and he turns all around to take in the view. Although the snow-covered suburban lawns are nothing new, the enormous red sleigh and eight reindeer are a bit of a shock. Michael watches in awe as Santa loads his enormous toy bag into the back of the sleigh. The bag remains tightly shut, but Michael can imagine the ribbon,wrapping paper, and joy about to burst forth from within. And then there’s the reindeer! They are gorgeous specimens with luscious brown fur and sturdy off-white antlers that gleam in the moonlight. Santa moves toward the reindeer closest to the sleigh, Blitzen, and slyly feeds him a carrot. 

“Don’t tell your siblings.” Santa whispers, chuckling and turning back to face Michael. He sighs as he locks eyes with the little boy. 

“Are you ready to hop in the sleigh Michael?”

Michael nods furiously, then slides into the left-hand side of the glossy red bench. The hundreds of buttons, knobs, and dials before him fill his head with questions. His head buzzing, Michael begins to list them off, pointing and gesturing as he asks.

“What does this dial do? And this button? What about this one? And why is the steering wheel on the right side? Are you British? How many buttons are there? Why isn’t Rudolph here? Does he only come when it’s foggy? What if it’s foggy in one part of the world and clear in another part? Also, last question: why are you so sad?”

Santa pauses, thoroughly surprised by the young boy’s observant questions. “What do you mean Michael?” he asks.

“Well,” Michael begins. “You used to have a little glimmer in your eye, but ever since I untied you it’s been gone. Not to mention your smile looks more sad than happy.” Michael frowns and looks down at his hands. “You’re supposed to be jolly, but I think I made you sad.”

Santa sighs again, sliding into the sleigh next to Michael. “You’re right, Michael. I’m usually very jolly. I guess I just feel bad for all the children who will wake up and be disappointed tomorrow morning.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, if you and I fly back to the North Pole right now, there won’t be enough time for me to finish delivering presents. A lot of kids in the west won’t be getting anything.”

Santa’s heavy words make Michael’s heart sink. Although he’s sure she isn’t loud enough to yell at him from the pantry, Michael can still hear Diana’s voice…

Let him go, Michael. It’s the right thing to do.

Michael frowns slightly, thinking hard, then looks up into Santa’s big brown eyes. 

“All right, young man. Are you ready to go?”

Categories
Kiley's Stories

And to All a Good Night (Part 2/4)

Diana’s jaw drops as she turns to face her twin. “Are you crazy? We’d end up on the naughty list for sure!”

“We’re already gonna end up on the naughty list for being out of bed on Christmas Eve and for almost killing Santa Claus. Can’t we at least get something out of it? If Santa takes us to the North Pole we can tell everyone at school about it and we’ll be the coolest third graders in the whole freakin’ world.”

Diana pauses, considering the delightful image of Molly Robinson’s face when Diana tells her that Santa Claus is actually Black. Then, she shakes her head and gives Michael a scathing glare. 

“No way, we’re not doing that.”

Michael sighs, rolling his eyes. “Fine, let’s go get some peppermint hot cocoa from the pantry. The scent of the powder might be able to wake him up.”

Diana nods and leads the way toward the kitchen. Michael follows at a slight distance, and, unbeknownst to his sister, grabs a long, cast-iron candy cane stocking holder and hides it behind his back.

Diana flips on the kitchen light and enters the walk-in pantry. She peers around at row upon row of colorful boxes, searching for the peppermint hot cocoa. 

“Hey, Michael, where’s the–”

“I’m sorry Diana, but I have to see the North Pole.” With that, Michael pushes the double doors of the pantry shut, slipping the candy cane through the handles to prevent Diana from escaping. 

Diana pounds on the door with her fists. “Michael, let me out!”

“Diana, keep up that racket if you wanna wake up Mom and Dad.”

The pounding and shouting ceases immediately. Michael grins at his handiwork, then runs back toward the old man in the living room.

After examining the sleeping Santa and determining his relative height and weight, Michael envisions exactly which lights he’ll need to restrain Kris Kringle. He pulls the perfect string of lights from a bin stuffed away in the closet. After untangling the long green wire and its colorful bulbs, he drags it back to the living room where Santa still lies.

“I have to hurry,” Michael whispers to himself, taking note of Santa’s twitching fingers. The boy moves swiftly and delicately as he props the old man up and ties him up next to the fireplace. Santa’s hat droops in front of his face as his lolling head hangs helplessly. Finally, the bonds holding Saint Nick are secure, and Michael lifts the man’s head up, leaning it back against the fireplace to keep it upright. Michael then shoves a dish towel, which, ironically, has a cartoon Santa Claus on it, into Santa’s mouth.

Okay, Michael thinks, How do I wake up Santa without waking up Mom and Dad?

He pauses, stroking his chin thoughtfully until the idea hits him.

“I can just poke him.”

Michael begins roughly poking Santa in his stomach, ears, arms, and even eyes, though he avoids poking those too hard. After a minute of this incessant poking, Michael’s wet willy finally stirs the bearded old man. Santa’s big, round eyes fly open and he looks around in horror. His face hardens as he takes in his situation, and he locks eyes with Michael. Michael shivers as those dark brown eyes stare into his soul. Nevertheless, he begins the speech he’s been preparing in his head.

“Good evening, Mr. Claus. My name is Michael Hardy. You’re probably wondering why I’ve tied you up and gagged you.” Santa nods ferociously, eyebrows raised. “Basically, Santa, I want you to take me to the North Pole and show me around. And until you promise to take me, I am going to leave you tied up here.”

Santa furrows his brow, but Michael continues with his matter-of-fact tone. “Mr. Claus, you probably should just agree to take me because nobody but my twin sister and me know that you’re here, and she’s…preoccupied.”

Santa appears to be thinking hard, even with the hand towel stuffed tightly in his mouth. After a few moments, Santa starts to mumble something resembling English, so Michael leans forward and snatches the towel away. Santa clears his throat and starts to speak, his eyes glinting from behind his silver-rimmed glasses.

“Michael, it’s very nice to meet you. I wish it were under different circumstances.” Surprisingly enough, the old man smiles at Michael before continuing. “Now, do you really want to force me to take you to the North Pole?”

“Yes.”

Santa smiles at first, then falters. “Oh. That’s not the response I was expecting” He purses his lips, still thinking hard. Finally, he relaxes and begins to speak.

“All right Michael, you win. Once you untie me I promise that I will take you in my sleigh to visit the North Pole.”

“Right away? As soon as I untie you?”

“Yes, as soon as you untie me.”

Michael nods with an evil grin dancing across his face as he begins to untie the Christmas lights, working away at knots and yanking the cords from the fireplace doors. When Michael finally frees Santa, he rises to his feet like any old man does: slowly, with lots of grunts and cracking noises.

Santa bends over to gather his sack of toys, which Michael hadn’t even noticed hiding in a dark corner. Slinging the bag over his shoulder, Santa adjusts his hat and glasses. 

“Follow me.”

Categories
Kiley's Stories

And to All a Good Night (Part 1/4)

Sleep will not come for Diana as she lies, tucked tightly in blankets, on the bottom bunk of the bed. Above her, Michael’s soft snores fill the delicate silence of the dark room. Shifting her gaze to the window across the room, Diana sees the glowing red and green lights her mom strung up the day after Thanksgiving. Snowflakes cling to the windowpane, reflecting the beautiful lights hanging above.

“Michael,” Diana calls out hoarsely. After a moment without response, she tries again. “Michael!”

“What is it?” replies a muffled voice. Diana ignores her twin’s irritation and continues.

“I need to get a glass of water.”

“So go and get a glass of water then!” Michael huffs, rolling over noisily up above.

“But it’s Christmas Eve. What if Santa is downstairs and he sees me and we don’t get presents?”

You’re the only one who wouldn’t get presents. Now, leave me alone.”

Carefully untucking the blankets, Diana swings her short legs over the side of the bed and gets up. She walks blindly toward the bedroom door; the only things helping her see are the cheerful lights outside the window. When she reaches the doorknob she turns it carefully, not wanting to wake her parents in the next room. Opening the door a sliver, Diana inches through the small space. She  pulls on the doorknob and hears the soft click that means it’s shut. She wishes there were a way to lock Michael inside.

Diana makes her way down the long, skinny hall like a ninja, coming to a stop at the far end where the spiral staircase leads downstairs to the living room. She crosses her fingers as she descends, hoping that Santa has yet to arrive. All she has to do is cross through the living room to the kitchen for her water and back. The daunting task seems easy enough—that is, until she enters the living room and finds Santa Claus passed out on the floor.

Diana gasps, her small brown eyes widening in horror. “Santa!”

She races toward him, dropping to her knees by his head. If she weren’t so scared that she just killed Saint Nick, Diana would be in awe of the magical man. His cherry red suit is a beautiful red velvet, decorated along the edges by a white trim of what looks like a cloud. The famous red hat sits slightly atilt atop his bald head, and his enormous, fluffy gray beard reaches down to his chest. Diana looks into his round face, which possesses the jolly quality of James Earl Jones, with glossy eyes. Santa’s glasses balance precariously on his nose, and his heavy eyelids are closed.

“Santa, Santa are you okay?” Diana whispers hysterically, shaking the old man’s shoulder. The jolly fellow does not stir, but instead stays completely still. Diana knows that she should get help, but the thought of waking her sleeping parents scares her even more than a dead Santa Claus. After a moment of critical thinking, Diana observes Santa’s great belly moving up and down as he breathes. Clearly, Saint Nick isn’t dead, but he looks close to it. He sure is taking an intense nap for someone who only works one day a year. The slow breathing seems peaceful but unhealthy at the same time. Santa’s eyelids shift slightly but don’t open, and his limbs stay put in an odd position as Diana ponders what to do next. 

“What do I do, Santa?” Diana whimpers into the darkness. The only answer comes from the blinking of the Christmas tree lights paired with the ragged breaths of ole Saint Nick. Waking her parents isn’t a viable option, so Diana sighs, resigned to her only choice. She needs her brother.

~~~

“Michael. Hey, Michael, wake up.”

Michael groans and rolls over, burying his face in his pillow. 

“Go to sleep.”

“No, Michael, I need your help.”

“I think you can manage getting a glass of water without me.”

“No, I need you to help me wake Santa up.”

His interest peaked, Michael sits up. He locks eyes with his sister, a stern expression on his face. “What do you mean wake Santa up?”

Diana twists one of her braids around her index finger nervously. “He may or may not be passed out on our living room floor right now.”

What?” Michael throws off his blankets and scrambles to the end of the bed, shooing Diana away so he can climb down the ladder. Together, the twins race down the hallway and staircase to the living room, where Diana crouches beside Santa’s head.

“I just found him like this when I came to get water. I don’t know how–” She stops, looking back to find Michael frozen on the bottom step of the staircase.

“Come closer, stupid. Help me wake him up.”

Michael takes a few cautious steps toward the sleeping saint, then sits down next to his sister. Slowly, he reaches out to touch Santa’s velvet coat. Seeing his own small, milk chocolate-colored fingers against the stark red material proves that he’s not hallucinating. Diana watches her brother with interest; she can see his mind moving a mile a minute.

“We could wake him up,” Michael whispers, deep in thought. “Or, we could do something else.”

“What else could possibly be more important than waking him up?” Diana cries, her brow furrowed.

“Well, we could tie him up and hold him hostage until he takes us to the North Pole.”

Categories
Kiley's Stories

The Road to Golderia—Chapter 1 Pt. 1

Author’s Note: This is a new fantasy story/book I’m writing, and I thought I’d share part of the first chapter with you all. Though this post is not about the Black Lives Matter movement, I encourage everyone to continuing educating themselves and supporting the cause. I personally just purchased two books about understanding and combating racism in America. The fight’s not over yet!!!

I stared meekly down at the scrap of paper in my hand, the faded yellow paper emblazoned with my signature. Aurora Wendel. The inky black scrawl bled slightly as I wrote it, so the little “a” in my first name nearly collided with the “W” in my last.

“Good enough,” I sighed. With that, I reached forward and threw the paper into the Elders’ Cauldron. As I turned away from the enormous black pot, the surrounding crowd swarmed to fill my spot. Snaking past countless villagers, I managed to escape by the bakery. There, with trace amounts of dirt smeared across his face, stood my brother Leo.

“Took you long enough,” he called with a smirk as I drew nearer.

“Shut up and let’s get out of here. If I see one more piece of paper I might vomit.”

Leo and I strolled side by side around the corner, soon out of sight from the enormous crowd in the town square.

“So, what are the odds of you actually getting elected to the council?” Leo asked, his strawberry blonde hair flopping annoyingly in front of his eyes.

I glanced over at him, blowing away a strand of my own crimson hair in the process. “Slim to none, I’m sure. It looks like every person in Rimps over seventeen wants to be chosen.”

“True, I guess, but aren’t girls historically more likely to have their names drawn?” he asked eagerly. “I think I heard that at school once.”

I scoffed at this statement, especially since Leo hadn’t attended school in almost a year. “No, that’s just a myth. The selection process is completely random.”

“That’s not true,” Leo argued. His freckled face swam in my peripheral vision as we left the main part of town and started down the snake-like path to our cottage. “You know as well as I do that the palace performs background checks before announcing which name the Elders drew. So, for all we know, everyone else will fail the background checks and you’ll win by default.”

I could sense the excitement in his voice, and I did my best not to damper it as I replied, “I suppose that’s true.”

“I knew it,” he proclaimed with triumph. “You’ve got a good shot of getting elected. And then you’ll go to Golderia and live in the palace and become famous.”

“Ugh, Leo,” I groaned, stopping in my tracks and turning to face him. It still amazed me that Leo and I were nearly the same height, despite him only being fifteen.

“Why do you want so badly for me to be chosen? All that would mean is I have to move away, and you’d transport all my goods for me. We’d never even get to see each other, and you’d be all alone taking care of Mother.” My throat closed a little at the thought of Leo, tending to Mother at her sick bed while I gallivanted around the palace.

“You’re thinking about this all wrong,” Leo insisted before starting to walk once more. “If you’re elected to the council, you could actually do some good. You could improve life for not just people in Rimps, but all across the kingdom. Arcus would be lucky to have someone like you on the council because you know exactly what the people need.”

As he spoke, we kept pace with one another, our sandy-colored cottage growing ever nearer. I watched his face flush—with pride, perhaps?—as he argued. The sight of him, so certain about my ability to make change, made my heart swell.

“As for Mother,” Leo continued, “We’ve already discussed that. Aunt Elizabeth can be there whenever I’m out on deliveries, and we’ve got the Becketts and Mr. Middleton just over the hill if I need more help.”

I shuddered. “Don’t go to Mr. Middleton, Leo. The man gives me the creeps.”

Leo rolled his eyes and waved her off with his hand. “You only say that because he likes me more than you.”

I opened my mouth to retaliate, but thought better of it. The kid had a point.

“Aurora,” Leo started, his tone more serious now than excited. “If you get elected—”

“That’s a big if,” I interrupt.

Leo sighed and plowed on. “If you get elected, I think you’ll make Arcus a better place. That means helping me, mom, our village, our province, everyone. That’s not something we should be afraid of.”

With these last words, we arrived on our front step. I looked around at the tall grass and cobblestone path as I avoided Leo’s gaze. I knew he was right. I knew he was sincere. Worst of all, I knew I would get emotional if I stared into those big brown eyes.

“I suppose you’re right,” I muttered, still looking down at the ground.

“Of course I am,” Leo said with a devilish grin. Then, he opened the front door, and the two of us were home.

A map of the kingdom of Arcus
Categories
Kiley's Stories Prompts

Thanic Syndrome

Author’s Note: While this post is not about the Black Lives Matter movement, I encourage everyone to continuing educating themselves and supporting the cause. In the words of Lin-Manuel Miranda, “This is not a moment, it’s the movement.”

Prompt: Write a story about a character who has always had the ability to change how they looked, and so they hid their true appearance behind attractive façades. Now, their abilities aren’t working, exposing what they truly look like.

An insufferable pinging noise rang out into the darkness, eliciting a furious groan from the figure under the covers. After silencing her alarm for the third time that morning, Amanda finally rolled out of bed with considerable effort. She stumbled into her door frame on her way to the bathroom, but she managed to flip on the lights. With the fluorescent lighting burning the sleep from her eyes, Amanda strode toward the shower in the far corner of the bathroom. When she passed the mirror however, the girl stopped dead in her tracks. 

Amanda turned to face the mirror straight on, leaning in closely to peer at every pore. Her slim, bronze-colored face stared back, an ethereal intensity palpable in her dark brown eyes. 

“I could’ve sworn I saw. . .” Amanda trailed off, not noticing any peculiarities. There were no pimples visible, not even a hair out of place. Bed head was for lesser beings than her. 

After a quick shower and a blow dry, Amanda’s silky brown hair looked even more perfect than before, so she returned to the mirror clutching her makeup bag. An instant later, the bag and all its contents scattered noisily across the floor and Amanda let out a brief scream. She immediately clapped a hand over her mouth, hoping not to wake the parents in the next room. The scream, it seemed, was a reaction to the fact that half of Amanda’s face was now a slimy, oozing patch of violet-colored flesh. 

Praying that she hadn’t woken anyone, Amanda slipped out the bathroom door and back to her room. This is bad, she thought, panicstricken. This is very, very bad. What is going on? Why have my abilities failed me? How am I supposed to handle this?

Back in the bedroom, Amanda tore apart every bin of junk and dresser drawer in search of the item she so desperately needed. It had been so long since she had needed Instructor Seven’s guidance. Will I even be able to make contact?

Finally, Amanda fished out a small electronic device from behind a row of books. The device looked like a pager, though no one but doctors used pagers anymore. It was small, rectangular, and had only three buttons: a small red circle, a flat purple strip, and a green square. Amanda pushed the red button while checking that the bedroom door was locked.

“Hurry,” she pleaded with the small communicator. It was only a matter of minutes before Amanda’s mother stormed in to get her daughter ready for school. Another agonizing thirty seconds passed, and Amanda was about ready to forget about the device and run for it. 

“Could I make it to New York City on foot?” Amanda whispered to herself. “I forget how much stamina humans have. Of course Physical Traits had to be my worst subject.” Before the girl managed to take action, however, a soft beep interrupted her rambling solo conversation.

“Oh thank Supreme,” Amanda whispered, her eyes fixed upon the device. 

It turned out that Amanda’s communicator was less like a pager and more like a computer screen. Mere seconds after the soft beeping noise began, the small screen that took up most of the device flashed on. There, blurry but still visible, sat Instructor Seven. Instructor Seven’s gooey, navy blue head took up the entire screen. His four eyes analyzed his student intensely, and the mouth on the right side of his face gaped open in shock. Despite his grotesque appearance, seeing the Instructor for the first time in years comforted Amanda. It was this sense of comfort that encouraged her to click the green universal translator button and launch right into her reason for calling. 

“Instructor, look, my true form is starting to show.” She paused and held the device’s camera close to her face. “I have no idea why, it just appeared this morning. I’m afraid my disguising abilities aren’t functioning properly.”

The Instructor analyzed his pupil, who looked less and less human with every passing minute. The fleshy purple skin had overtaken two-thirds of her face, thereby eliminating any possibility of hiding it. After a moment of intense concentration, the Instructor finally spoke.

“Cargatia 702, it looks to me like you have Thanic Syndrome.”

“Thanic Syndrome? Does that have anything to do with Thanic 116?” Cargatia asked warily. “You know, the Mursen who went crazy and thought he could live with humans forever?”

Instructor Seven sighed deeply. “Yes, that’s who the condition was named after. You, like Thanic, have become so attached to your Earth life that your body feels comfortable and at home, so it’s returning to its natural state. It is very hard to fight against.”

Cargatia felt tears welling up in her one human eye. (Her real face revealed two new indigo eyes, both without tear ducts.) She did not want to leave Earth or abandon her mission. After all these years of carefully conducted research!

 “Please, Instructor. Is there anything I can do? I have to complete the mission. I’ve come so far and–”

“Cargatia,” the Instructor interrupted. “We both know that you cannot stay on Earth. You could expose the entire Mursen race and all our covert operations. If our methods of obtaining information are revealed, we will lose all of our buyers from across the planet.”

Cargatia whimpered, lifting her hand to her rapidly deteriorating face. “But,” she whispered. “I don’t want to be ugly again.”

“Get a grip on yourself, Cargatia 702!” the Instructor bellowed. “You sound like a whiny human, desperate to prove that you meet a ridiculous standard. It’s disgraceful.” Cargatia nodded, blushing a slightly darker shade of purple.

“This is about protecting the ongoing operations of Mursen spies across the globe,” the Instructor continued sternly. You’ve done what you can to collect information on the American government over the years–”

“For a really high price, may I remind you.” Cargatia interjected, still sniffling (though she no longer had a human nose).

“Yes, your mission has been extremely successful.” Instructor Seven conceded, rolling one of his outer eyes in the process. “It’s ridiculous how many governments and businesses will pay good money for American FBI secrets.” The Instructor muttered these last words to himself, chuckling slightly as he did so. Then, he refocused his attention on Cargatia.

By now, Cargatia’s entire head had lost its human façade, revealing her true appearance: a slimy and brilliantly purple creature with three eyes, slits for a nose, and two mouths. Instructor Seven sighed, wishing that his pupil could understand how beautiful it was to be different from humans. Why would anyone want to associate themselves with these lowly creatures? the Instructor thought to himself before continuing.

“None of this matters now. You must leave Earth and return home to Murse.”

Cargatia went to wipe away her tears, but she found there were none left. She looked down at her dainty, golden hand; the rest of her disguise hadn’t worn off yet. Maybe she could stay on Earth if only. . .

No, a small voice in Cargatia’s head told her. Getting too attached is what caused this in the first place. Leaving is the only way to rehabilitate your disguise abilities. After one more moment of self-pity, Cargatia looked into Instructor Seven’s eyes and nodded.

“Tell me what I have to do.”

“Firstly,” the Instructor began. “You have to get out of your host’s house without anybody seeing you. Then, make your way into the city. Do you remember where the Teleportation Station is?” 

“Yes, and I remember the code.” Cargatia replied. 

“Good,” Instructor Seven said with a curt nod. “Now, as you leave you must especially avoid the older woman, the one who works for the human government.”

Thud. Thud. Thud. Cargatia snapped her head up as someone pounded on the door. 

“Amanda, you better be awake in there,” came a woman’s voice from just outside.

Cargatia turned back to her communicator. “It’s gonna be pretty hard to avoid her when she’s knocking on my door!” Cargatia whispered hysterically. 

“Calm down,” the Instructor urged. “You’re going to have to fight against your body to alter your appearance. It will take a lot out of you, but you should be able to manage it long enough to get out of the house.”

“Okay, okay,” Cargatia nodded as the woman pounded on the door once more.

“Amanda? What’s going on in there?”

As quickly as possible, Cargatia grabbed her school backpack and filled it with all of her notes on the FBI agent known as “Mom.” After zipping up the communicator in an outside pocket, Cargatia faced herself in the mirror above the dresser.

“Amanda if you don’t open this door right now I’m coming in.” The firm sincerity in Mom’s voice would have made Cargatia’s heart race if she had one.

“I’m fine, Mom,” Cargatia called, trying and failing to sound nonchalant. She refocused her attention on the mirror as Mom’s voice continued to thunder through the locked door.

“You need to hurry or you’ll miss this bus. I’m warning you, young lady, you better be out here in less than a minute.”

Cargatia frantically tried to fix her appearance. C’mon, she told herself. Just focus on what you saw in the mirror this morning.

As a creature from the distant planet Murse, Cargatia possessed a natural ability to alter her appearance. The strengthening and perfecting of this ability was just one step in the long, rewarding process of becoming a Mursen spy. Cargatia loved her job, her planet, and of course her commission. Now though, as disguising herself became difficult for the first time in her life, everything seemed completely terrifying.

“Why me?” Cargatia whispered at the purple face in the mirror as she struggled to change her appearance. “Why did I have to get attached to a planet where all they do is kill and lie and pay to know each other’s secrets?”

You know why, said that same little voice in Cargatia’s head. In that moment, Cargatia could smell the coffee Mom had brewed downstairs. She could hear Dad singing some mindless pop song off-key in the shower. She could envision the friends waiting for her at school, all of them wildly fascinating and just as beautiful as her.

Beautiful. Humans invent such strange yet intoxicating concepts.

Suddenly, Cargatia gasped. Her skin had started to change from vibrant violet back to bronze. Perfectly-tanned skin soon replaced her extra eyes, and a cute little nose appeared in place of the slits. Cargatia continued to focus all her energy on altering her appearance, so much so that she barely noticed another knock at the door.

“Amanda, you’re really pushing it. I’m going to get the key.”

“Wait, what?” Cargatia stuttered, turning away from the mirror toward the voice outside the door.

“You heard me, young lady.” Mom replied, moving back down the hall toward her own room.

Cargatia let out a whimper and returned her focus to the mirror, every particle of her being battling against itself for control. The pain felt agonizing, but she could not stop now. Then, a moment later, Cargatia heard the definitive sound of a key sliding into a lock.

“No!” Cargatia shouted, paralyzed with fear. Half of her face still showed that revolting purple goo. The door swung open and, without thinking, Cargatia flung herself on the floor and buried her face in her arms.

“Don’t look at me Mom!” Cargatia cried, her eyes welling up once more. “I’m hideous!”

Mom kneeled down on the floor and pried Cargatia’s arms away from her face. Cargatia inhaled sharply, desperately searching for an explanation that wouldn’t expose her fellow spies.

“Honey,” Mom whispered kindly. “Just because you aren’t wearing makeup today doesn’t mean you’re hideous.”

Cargatia stopped crying, her thoughts bouncing around her head like they were on a trampoline. “What?” 

“You look beautiful, Amanda. Now hurry up, or you’ll be late.” With that, Mom stood up and left the room. 

Cargatia could not believe her ears. Did I manage to finish altering my appearance after all? Cargatia rose to her feet slowly, then pivoted to face the mirror above the dresser once more. There, staring back at her, was a beautiful girl with an enormous chunk of oozing purple flesh where her left cheekbone should be.

“What the–”

A soft beeping noise interrupted Cargatia’s train of thought. She leaned down and pulled the communicator from the outside pocket of the backpack. Instructor Seven looked anxiously up at Cargatia from the tiny screen.

“Well? Did she see you?” he asked.

“She, um,” Cargatia stuttered, at a loss for words. “She saw my face but I guess she didn’t see my true appearance. Even though it’s clearly visible.” Cargatia pointed at the chunk of violet flesh.

To Cargatia’s great surprise, Instructor Seven began to laugh. He laughed so heartily and intensely that Cargatia feared he had been compromised and this man wasn’t her Instructor at all.

“Instructor Seven, what–”

“That damn fool Thanic. I can’t believe he was right.”

“What was he right about?” Cargatia asked, utterly bewildered now.

“Well you see,” Instructor Seven began. “Thanic Syndrome is named after Thanic because he was so attached to his Earth life that he went crazy. However, Thanic wanted to stay on Earth because he had allegedly discovered a way for humans and Mursens to live in harmony without the use of disguises.”

“What do you mean?” Cargatia interrupted, still not following.

“Cargatia, the man theorized that even if we showed our true appearances, the humans would not notice that we are from another planet.”

Cargatia interjected with more questions. “What? How is that possible?” Then, something became abundantly clear to the Mursen girl. “Instructor Seven, is that why Mo– I mean, the woman couldn’t see my violet skin?”

“Exactly, Cargatia,” the Instructor replied, still chuckling slightly. 

Now it was Cargatia’s turn to laugh. “Oh my Supreme, Instructor. Humans only see what they want to see!”

Categories
Kiley's Stories Prompts

The Statue of Rosalia

Prompt: Write an insane fantasy backstory about a piece of furniture or knickknack in the room you’re in (like the magic mirror from Snow White, Cinderella’s glass slipper, Aladdin’s lamp or carpet, or the cupboard from The Indian in the Cupboard, for example).

Princess Rosalia of the island kingdom Stultus had always been completely invisible. Not physically of course, for her malicious parents of course chastised and punished her every time they laid eyes on her. Indeed, the King’s favorite punishment was to lock his only daughter in a tower, located in a distant corner of the castle. No, Rosalia felt invisible to the staff of the castle. Anything she did and anywhere she went, nobody seemed to notice. If she weren’t seated at the dinner table alongside her royal parents, Rosalia thought the castle staff might just assume she was one of them.

Rosalia’s invisibility and endless hours in the lonesome tower soon collided in a perfect storm. One day, during a particularly horrible stint in isolation, Rosalia sat on the dusty floor, staring at the enormous oak door and waiting for something to happen.

Bang. Something did, indeed, happen. The door burst open and a handsome young man entered holding a tray of food. Rosalia gazed up at him, her eyes the size of a dragon’s egg.

“I’m so sorry about the door, Your Highness.” The boy declared while sinking to a low bow. “I didn’t realize it would open so violently,” he muttered, still looking at his shoes.  

“That’s quite all right,” Rosalia replied with a smirk. The servant set down her tray and backed away toward the door, which still stood ajar. Then, with a swift hand, he reached back and swung the door shut.

Almost immediately, Rosalia jumped to her feet and rushed into the boy’s arms. “Oh, Taigon, where have you been? It’s so lonely and tiresome up here.”

“I’m sorry my love, I had a few things to attend to.” Taigon leaned back and cupped Rosalia’s face in his hands. “I’m here now though, if only for a minute.” The pair gazed into each other’s way in that lovestruck, sickening way that makes a storyteller like myself quite nauseated. Nevertheless, their rapid heartbeats and flushed faces exemplified the wondrous qualities of forbidden love. 

“Are you still ready for tonight?” Rosalia breathed excitedly.

“Of course I am,” her lover replied with a slight grin.

“Good.” the princess whispered. “Then I’ll see you at midnight under my balcony.”

“I shall see you then, Your Highness.” Taigon uttered, still gazing into Rosalia’s wide brown eyes. The two shared a kiss, short but sweet, before Taigon headed for the door. Before he left, though, he produced for his princess a single red rose.

“Don’t lose it,” Taigon uttered with a wink. Rosalia’s heart swelled.

As he exited, the princess turned back to her tray of food, but she felt too excited to eat. After sixteen agonizing years, she would at last be leaving the kingdom of Stultus forever, alongside a good man who loved her dearly.

The next few hours in the tower passed quite painlessly, as Rosalia admired her rose and fantasized about her life on the run with Taigon. The two had made several arrangements in order to escape underneath the noses of the guards. Rosalia’s invisibility would help in this matter, for none of the handmaidens or staff members would bother to notice she was missing. Over and over again the princess ran through their plan in her mind.

Grab the packed bag stashed in the basement storage closet. Meet Taigon underneath my balcony. Creep along the castle walls to the stables. Take a horse along the back route just as the guards are switching rotations. Stow away on the boat headed for the mainland. Pay a Crosser to take us to a parallel world.

When a King’s guard finally let Rosalia leave the tower that night, her escape route had been etched perfectly into her mind. She didn’t bother going to dinner or even her bedroom—it was too late for that. Instead, she hid in the palace garden and waited for the hour of freedom to arrive. An hour before midnight, Rosalia heard a pair of voices coming from the other side of the garden. She quickly hid behind a large square hedge and listened closely to the speakers as they drew nearer.

“How long did you keep Rosalia locked up today, Anton?”

“Most of the day. That brat needs to realize that frolicking around the grounds on horseback is unsuitable for a princess.”

Rosalia felt heat rise to her face. The speakers were her parents, the king and queen of Stultus, the ruiners of childhoods.

“She’s just a girl.” The queen reminded her husband. “A troublesome girl, yes, but a girl nevertheless.”

The king snorted. “She’s not just a girl, Esmerelda. She’s a young woman. And a young woman should be courting princes to make new alliances, not galavanting around like an imbecile.”

At these words, Rosalia had to bite down on her fist to prevent herself from screaming out. Rosalia had never been part of a council, held a meeting with foreign dignitaries, or even attended a ball where she could meet a prince. Whose fault was it that Rosalia had no princess experience? 

His, Rosalia thought bitterly, trying to send her odium through the hedge and across the garden to her father. It doesn’t matter though, she reminded herself, because I have all the love I need from someone else.

At half past eleven the king and queen left the garden, and shortly thereafter Rosalia snuck down to the basement with her single rose clutched in her hand. She came across no one, not even a guard.

“This really is my lucky night,” Rosalia whispered excitedly to herself. After snatching her getaway bag from its hiding spot, Rosalia made her way outside. 

The chilly night air hit her in the face, and she breathed in joyfully. The night felt a bit cold, but the air tasted like freedom. By five to midnight, Rosalia had crept along the base of the castle all the way to her own bedroom window. There, underneath her balcony, Rosalia stood and waited for Taigon. She felt the breeze against her face, smelled the bittersweet scent that only rebelliousness could bring, and she waited. She waited and waited and waited some more.

The witching hour, the darkest time of night, came and went and still Rosalia waited. The pleasant midnight breeze had mutated into a bitter, stinging wind. Rosalia shivered in her thin night dress, but she did not move. Her lips turned a nasty shade of blue and her fingertips felt numb; nevertheless, Rosalia stood unwaveringly under that balcony. The stars looked down upon her in pity. They had never seen a soul so sad, a soul so determined to prove the unprovable. 

A more optimistic storyteller might not be so quick to judge Taigon. Perhaps he got lost, injured, or even captured by castle guards. A smart storyteller, however, knows the truth; as Rosalia stood, the single rose clutched tightly in her frozen hands, Taigon boarded the ship on which he would escape Stultus forever (with several of the princess’s finest possessions stowed in his knapsack).

He will come for me, Rosalia told herself repeatedly. He will come and show me that there are still good men in the universe.

As the pitch black sea above her lightened, Rosalia’s stature grew more and more rigid. The princess closed her eyes in an attempt to stop them from watering in the wind. Her shivers ceased, and her frail fingers hardened as they wrapped even tighter around the rose. 

The sun was about to kiss the horizon when Rosalia first spoke. All night she had thought and prayed fervently, but she had yet to use her voice. 

“I shall not move until he comes for me. I shall not move until I am certain there is still good.” Rosalia uttered these words into the early morning mist, her eyes still clamped shut and the rest of her body unmoving. The princess spoke these words, which seem to be full of love and passion, in a flat tone that revealed the truth; her heart had hardened past the point of no return.

For this reason, just as the stars twinkled one last goodbye and the sun peeked its eyes over the horizon, Princess Rosalia of Stultus turned to clay. The sun’s own warmth proved that Rosalia had none left within herself, and it hardened her cold, fragile body and spirit. The rose in her hand froze as well, leaving a life size statue where an innocent girl once stood.

Even more heartbreaking than the girl made of clay was the living girl’s last thought. Before her body froze forever and heartbreak killed her soul, Rosalia asked herself a terrifying question.

Why didn’t I just escape without him?

The answer, though Rosalia will never know it, was quite simple. With every minute she waited, a little part of Rosalia’s soul died. Had she tried to venture into the world alone, she would not have made it very far. The girl, who had spent a lifetime being hated or ignored, was weak. She could not handle the pain of almost having something so good, then being robbed of it so unexpectedly.

As the sun continued to rise, something peculiar happened. For every minute that nobody bothered to look for the missing princess, the statue shrunk. It grew smaller and smaller the longer it went unseen. Soon enough, the statue became so small that it would fit in a person’s hand. Had a guard or groundskeeper looked over at the grass beneath the princess’s balcony, the shrunken statue would have been invisible.

The statue finally stopped shrinking when a young handmaiden discovered the princess was not in bed and alerted the guards. They searched the whole castle and the whole kingdom, but no one ever discovered where she had gone. Their only clue was that several of the princess’s plainest clothes were missing alongside some of her most expensive possessions.

Years passed, and the legend of the missing princess spread across the kingdom in a slow, agonizing burn. Those who rode ships to the mainland spread the story of Rosalia’s mysterious disappearance, and after a while the whole universe knew her name. Poor Rosalia. Only in a frozen cage of clay could she escape invisibility.

Ten years had passed since Rosalia’s disappearance when something terrible happened to her island kingdom. A young boy arrived on the castle doorstep atop an enormous dragon, and he demanded to know where the princess was. Long ago, though the King had forgotten it, he had promised the poor boy his daughter’s hand in marriage on a trip through a peasant village.

“I must know where the princess has gone!” The boy shouted, his face set and his eyes alight with fury. “It is my right and my duty to marry her!” He yelled over the grunts and growls of his terrifying pet.

The king, who stood on the castle steps surrounded by guards, looked perplexed. “My boy, I was merely joking when I promised you my daughter’s hand.” The dragon roared and the king backstepped. “But, of course, I would marry the two of you right now if only I knew where she was.” The king smiled in what he hoped looked like a sincere, apologetic manner. It did not.

The boy stared down at the king, his face unreadable. Then, without flinching, he uttered a single word that would destroy them all.

“Burn.”

Chaos ensued. No castle, house, town, or farm was spared as the dragon unleashed its full potential. The smoking island could be seen from miles around, but no ship tried to help the kingdom. The people of Stultus, especially their royals, had always been a pompous and callous folk. One band of pirates watched gleefully as citizens jumped into the ocean to escape the dragon’s flames.

“Bet they’re regretting that trade ban now, aye?” one captain shouted to thunderous guffaws.

By the time the boy and his dragon abandoned Stultus, the entire island was a smoking pile of rubble and death. The boy fled atop his magnificent beast, still in search of something which he so desperately needed . . . though that is another story entirely. 

Legend has it that only one thing survived the dragon prince’s wrath: a minuscule statue of a beautifully sad young woman. 

Long after the smoke cleared and kind souls buried the bodies, the pile of ash that was once Stultus attracted visitors. Travelers came from far and wide to see the ruins, including one particularly observant mage. This cloaked man spotted the statue, swiftly bent down, and pocketed it. From his hands it passed to a gang of goblins, then to a young maiden, then on to a prince. The small statue, beloved by many but understood by none, passed through hands and survived across generations. Millenia passed, and the Crossers—those who walked between universes—ended up bringing Rosalia to my universe, known to the enlightened travelers as Caer. 

By the time Rosalia wound up in a Boston pawn shop, the ashes of Stultus had traveled with the wind and spread so far and wide that nobody remembered the island’s name.

Rosalia stayed in Boston for a while, but her journey eventually brought her to Washington, D.C. The statue appeared to have no value to most of Caer’s consumers. In fact, Rosalia’s permanent residence was one dusty shelf or another, from one forgotten box in the attic to the next. Nevertheless, one day a woman shopping at the self-proclaimed “best antique store in the nation’s capital” purchased the statue as a gift for her daughter. That woman was my grandmother. 

Now, Rosalia sits on yet another dusty shelf in my sunroom. Her cracked lines and unseeing eyes look exhausted from the weight of her story. Nevertheless, it is a weight she must bear, for nobody else in any universe has bothered to remember her story or the story of her home. With their names nothing more than long-ignored whispers in the wind, it’s up to the clay statue of a broken girl to tell their story. 

Well, it’s up to the statue and me. 

Sometimes, when I walk by that dusty shelf, I trick myself into believing that the small figurine has moved. Late at night, if I’m incredibly quiet, I even wonder if I can hear the statue cracking. As if the long forgotten girl inside wanted to break free. 

But then, of course, I remind myself of the truth. Rosalia will only revive herself when Taigon comes back to her. Only then could this insignificant statue become the strong and beautiful creature she once was. Only if she believed in goodness once more. 

Taigon will never return. Rosalia will never escape. Stultus will never be remembered. And me? Well, I’ll never stop telling damn good stories.