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Haunted (Journaling)

By Asche Keegan

I have abandoned my old haunts, but they have not abandoned me.

I sit alone in empty rooms, ancient worlds calling to me. Voices whisper. Remember your first English teacher? In that dusty room? It was always raining outside. The projector was broken. She did everything by hand, brought props to class. She was so busy, but you never saw it. She would have corrected your passive voice.

The dust makes me cough, but I go to the window and look out. That same tree still sits here outside the window, lightly waving its branches. She was there when they hospitalized you. Then, you didn’t even say goodbye.

I leave and keep wandering.

I find myself in an empty auditorium, standing on a table and staring at the giant screen opposing me. Remember when he taught you how to dab? This was the only classroom you goofed off in, the only class you played Minecraft during. One of only a couple teachers to whom you never sent a thank you note. It still smells like mold and mildew and the green velvet that encased the walls.

I can’t stay here, so I leave the school, wandering.

And then I’m running, feet slamming the concrete until I reach the soccer fields I grew up on, where three years of soccer and training left me behind. Now, I’m slow and gasping for breath, hands on my knees, sputtering out my protests before the voices begin. You always played on the Turquoise team. Lost every game but one in your second year. That was pretty cool. To win for once. You hated the Orange team. And the White team. But the umpire gave you free candy sometimes.

I catch my breath and keep running.

I pass the softball field where I caught my first pop fly—Remember the sunflower seeds covering every inch of the dugout?—the other fields where I played first base for three years—remember that one time you played pitcher? Is it still an old haunt if you’re playing again this year?—and then I’ve crossed the loop, and I’m heading back into town again—remember when you learned how to drive on this road?

I pass the hotel I grew up in—remember when they kicked you out?—and the ice cream store we used to visit every week—but you only ever got bags of baby carrots—and the Pizza Hut we always longed to go to—even though you could never eat pizza—and still I keep walking.

And as I walk, the voices point out things that used to be here but aren’t anymore—remember when that billboard advertised swimming lessons? That used to be a jewelry store. The bookstore’s been out of business for years now.

And everywhere I walk, the memories rise up, overwhelming and consuming me. The new hotel, the sauna place, the gym, the old gym, the Kids Club, the hospital, the stores where we ate all those baby food peas, parking lot after parking lot imprinted with memories traced right along the white parking lines.

There’s a road here, which we proudly marched down during the annual Christmas parade—Remember when you had friends who cared about you? Remember the pedophile you accidentally let into the organization? Remember the triumphant lifting of your banners? Remember the lights and the glow? The breathless anticipation? The aching in your ankles? I’m crying in the middle of the road. There’s a car coming, but I barely see it. I can't handle it anymore.

I leave the city behind, and I step into fantasy, wandering.

There’s so many doors everywhere, stretching into other worlds, and I pick one at random, falling in. When next I open my eyes, I’m surrounded by caterpillar weeds, stretching forward in all directions. Above me a million galaxies appear in the sky, and lanterns light a path through the field. Somewhere soft music lilts on a warm breeze that smells like hot chocolate. Remember when Ayla held you when you cried? Remember when your best friend had a discussion with Ayla for you to get her to stop being angry at you? Remember when Ash died?

The last thought dissolves the world, plunging me into the next. Red clay now covers every surface. Flat-topped homes have caved in places, been demolished in others. A long road, made up of a dust just as red as the rest of the world, stretches out into the far off distance. A lone man stands just within sight of the end of the road, staring into the sunset. Remember when Requiem was just a thought? When you created a world just to spite your broken mind? When you got plunged into a half-composed parallel universe you never thought you’d see? Then chose to write your book about the other side of the planet? The betrayal still stings, and I start running to the man whose name I can not remember.

He turns, and those great blue eyes sparkle with joy, and then I’m falling through another door in the universe.

Landscapes flash before my eyes—Remember the world of killer bats? Remember when you fell in love? Remember when you poured out your heart and soul in a sandy volleyball court? Remember when you shattered and love picked you back up again? Remember the world of the fire magic? Remember the NanoFic you started but never finished? Remember Peridot? Those creepy children? Stories flash past too quickly to keep up with, and I plummet through doors.

Yet then it stops, plunging me into a world where the mountains tower far above my head, the sun can never be found, and the sand goes on forever. “No!” I scream. Remember when you lost yourself here? Remember how many characters you killed? Remember when you killed your soul here? Remember when you gave in? Gregarious circles in the sky above me, great black wings blocking out what little light remains, and still I scream at the universe. “No! You can not leave me here!” Remember the pain you caused? The people you broke? The people who broke you? You couldn’t save them. You couldn’t even save yourself. The voices crush me, and I fall shivering to the ground, searching vainly in the sand for some sort of light to dispel the darkness with. You will never be able to save them. You are worthless. Useless. Pathetic. Incompetent. Why did you want to go home? You don’t belong there anymore. You don’t belong anywhere but here.

The Fische start to creep towards me again, and I crawl backwards. “No,” I voice, trembling. “This is not my home. I refuse. It will never be home.”

You don’t have a home anymore.

“Then I will make one,” I announce, and I push past my fantasies, wandering.

Beyond my fantasies there is nothing: only vast emptiness devoid of light, sound, and movement. Miraculously, the voices fall silent—there’s nothing to remember when nothing has ever happened. I lift my hand to create a new world, but it falls back against my side again, limp. What good would it do to create another world instead of living in the hundreds I have already been given? For an instant, I imagine a million different ways to repaint my mental walls, but I give up, for no world could ever satisfy me.

Someone slams on a horn, a jarring sound that yanks me from my reverie. I find myself watching the sky, raindrops touching my tongue. Despite only the brief moments I spent on other worlds, my raincoat is soaked and a black SUV is swerving to a stop in front of me. That's what I need, I think abesently. A world where it's always raining.

I look down and meet the eyes of the driver. Wordlessly, I move off the main road, stepping onto the nearest sidewalk.

“Hey!”

I turn.

A pause. “Where are you going?”

“I don’t know,” I reply honestly. “But I’m going.”

The driver wants to ask another question, but I don’t give him the time, and I keep walking, wandering.

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Update: Hello everyone! You may have noticed that updates have been farther between than normal, but that is because I have been working on a book called The Road to Requiem, for Camp NaNoWriMo this month! I am currently 30,000 words through the story after 23 days of writing it. Because I have been so busy working on this book, I have not been able to write as many short stories as I usually do.

That said, I am extremely passionate about my characters and my plotline for this novel, and I am looking forward to seeing how it turns out.

Here is an excerpt from my (unedited) prologue and a temporary cover design to hold you over until I get to writing a more official blurb/synopsis. :)

Enjoy!

Excerpt:

Ayla Wilmot, the Caretaker of the Universe, studied the malcontents before her with a steady gaze. "Do you know what kind of chaos open borders would cause to the universe?" she asked them, meeting each of their eyes before finally settling on LightWind, their leader, a representative from Sordi.

"Open borders would not cause chaos," LightWind said. He choose his words carefully, as if he knew that Ayla would leap on every hole he gave her. "Open borders would allow the universe to thrive by sharing valuable resources, magic, and technology."

Ayla considered the man, before glancing out over the waving fields she guarded. The World Between Worlds had many forms, mainly serving as a vantage point for research and approved inter-world travel. Occasionally, Ayla could intercede on behalf of God or Satan, but she tried to keep the number of people she sent back for a second chance at life to a minimum.

"LightWind, you have studied these worlds for centuries, and I can only imagine at how much your urge to travel to them has overcome your better reason. However, you know better than anyone here that there are unfinished and dangerous worlds out there, as well as worlds that could overthrow all known life in moments if they had an access point," Ayla said.

"We could keep borders closed to potentially dangerous worlds," LightWind replied.

"You would only allow underdeveloped or destroyed worlds to participate in your open borders act? What would you gain from such an action?"

"We would help them."

"With what? The representatives gathered here are from impoverished nations, scarcely surviving. Earth," and she paused, pointing to the person from the world, "Is in the middle of the Dark Ages, and no growth has been created in 500 years. If we open borders among worlds, should we expect that planet's superstition and uncleanliness to remain solely on that world? No. Those are not habits we want to spread to other worlds, especially underdeveloped ones," Ayla said.

LightWind fell silent, and as she swept her gaze across the others in the crowd, Ayla wondered if she might finally be getting through to them.

"We would need to open the doors to friendly realms of magic and heavy technology as well to allow for the underdeveloped nations," he finally said. Behind him, his followers shifted uneasily, and Ayla allowed herself a faint sensation of pleasure.

"And how do you propose that you are going to have the necessary skills to barter with extreme worlds? You are a researcher who has never traveled beyond your home world of Sordi and here. Do you have experience as an ambassador?"

"I don't, but those behind me do," LightWind said confidently. Someone cheered, and it felt like the dam gates had been broken, sending reaffirming energy surging through the crowd.

For the first time, Ayla felt uncertainty, studying the crowd and glancing back in LightWind's direction. "Do you truly believe that open borders will shape the universe for the better?" she asked him.

"Yes," he said. The others behind him murmured in approval.

Ayla sighed, and turned around, putting up a hand to keep the others from following her. "I don't trust that you are devoted to your cause," she said.

"I assure you that we are," LightWind said.

She closed her eyes to keep back the tears that threatened to fall. LightWind was a good man. "Would you die for your dream?" she asked, lifting her head as she waited for an answer.

A long moment of hesitation came, and when Ayla turned back to face the crowd, she saw that they were whispering among themselves, and he was unsure of what to say. She had ensnared him, but he should have known better than to take his grievances against the Caretaker of the Universe, second only to God and Satan.

Although, LightWind's blunt honesty had been what inspired respect in others more than anything else. His straightforwardness was why she had liked him in the first place. Her thoughts rebelled, and Ayla struggled to rein them back in. He wasn't dead yet.

Finally, LightWind stepped forward, distancing himself from the group behind him. "I can not speak on behalf of others when it comes to such a serious topic, but as for myself, I will gladly die for the next generation to have open travel and relationships among worlds."

Not even a second had passed before another individual, this time a representative from Terratretishtes stepped forward. "I will gladly die for this cause as well. And if it be a fool's errand, than so be it, and we will have learned for our history and for our future."

Edward, Earth's chief inter-world researcher, approached next. "England has no hope, yet I have found hope in the rest of the universe. I will die for this dream."

One after another, members began to step forward, until the crowd was about equally divided. Some teetered on the edge of proclaiming their undying support, and Ayla felt it important to issue a warning.

"Do not step forward if you are not truly willing to die. You will die." That decided them, and even a couple of the researchers who had approached began to look uneasy.

"Is this all?" Ayla asked. LightWind paused, turning to survey the group, counting, even as she had, under his breath.

Finally, he turned back to Ayla and nodded, to which she answered with a tightly pursed expression. "Very well. The rest of you are to return to your stations or your worlds, and allow me to speak with the others privately."

Though they seemed reluctant and disappointed, LightWind went to them, encouraging each of them to head back to where they had come from, thanking them for coming, and otherwise convincing each that they were the most important person in the World Between Worlds.

For the most part, they left in disappointment, yet with hope in their eyes and anxious glances back towards those condemned to die...the ones who shifted uneasily where they stood.

Ayla waited patiently until LightWind rejoined them, at which point she gestured for them to step back. "I'm about to offer you a deal," she said. "I will give you one chance to refuse. If you decline, go find the others out there and consider your life spared."

None spoke, so she continued. "To prove that you are serious about your cause, that you would make good ambassadors to foreign worlds, and that you have what it takes to spread your dream beyond the immediate generation, I will send you to one of four worlds, one which you are not familiar with."

Some stirred, some flinched, and satisfied with the reaction, Ayla continued. "You will never be able to leave these worlds alive again. You will have two goals. The first is to spread the word of the existence of other worlds to the people present within these four locations and study their reactions. Truly examine how they would react to information of this magnitude. Your second goal will be to appoint a successor. The successor must be a person born in the world you travel to, someone who is as passionate about your cause as you are, and is willing to take on your mantel when you die."

"You will die in these worlds, but you will have plenty of opportunities to live a full life."

"And what do we gain in return?" LightWind asked, voice catching on a nearby breeze.

"When you have convinced me that you are passionate about your cause, I will surrender these shackles to you," Ayla stated, holding up the bracelets that held the prominent sources of her power. One, white flecked with specks of gold, had been given to her by God Himself, while the other was black and streaked with grey, bestowed to her by the devil.

The price of failure for her would be high, but she had to create a bait that LightWind would not want to refuse.

LightWind smiled, confident in his choices, stepping forward. "I accept your offer."

"As do we!" someone called from behind him, and as one, the crowd roared in agreement.

Ayla closed her eyes, searching in the earth beneath her for solid stone. Moments later, the ground began to shake, and a large pillar pierced the wheat-filled fields, climbing higher and higher until it disappeared into the night sky. The others watched in awe, but Ayla had not finished.

Three more pillars climbed from their rocky home, crusting in new decorations and carvings. The four formed the points of a perfect square, equidistant from each other. "These will be the sign of our contract," Ayla said. "And by them, your descendants will know of the deal we have made."

Touching her bracelets together, she created an Opening in the universe, which she touched to the pillar, twisting as it entered the stone. The chiseling shifted accordingly, and at the bottom, the word, "Earth" appeared.


"You wanted to help underdeveloped worlds, and so I give you Earth," Ayla said. Striding towards the next pillar, about twenty feet away, she opened a second Opening, again shoving it into the stone.

The words at the bottom twisted to read, "Requiem."

"You wanted to help destroyed and warring worlds, and so I give you Requiem, a land teeming with civil war and on the verge of destruction."

Glancing at LightWind, she smiled, plucking the idea for the third world from her mind. "You said you needed to convince countries of great magical or technological power to lend their support for inter-world travel, so I give you Sordi, a combination of both."

Finally, she approached the fourth pillar, hands trembling as she opened the fourth Opening. "You vowed that you could convince the nations that could destroy the universe. I give you Widow's Mourning."

When Ayla was 100% confident that the Opening had been safely secured in the stone, she walked to the middle of the square, gesturing for LightWind to step forward. "You have one last chance to forget this entire encounter. By touching any of these portals, you accept the deal. And you can not choose Sordi, as you come from there."

"I would not have wanted it," LightWind replied. "I choose Widow's Mourning." He took a step towards the fourth pillar, lifting his hand to touch the object and thus enter the world. He hesitated, as any sane man would, but with only a last look at the sky, as if to remind himself of his dream, LightWind pressed his hand against the pillar and was sucked through the Opening.

One by one, Ayla began to assign others to the various worlds, creating a roughly equal number of people going to each. When the last woman pressed her hand against the stone of Requiem, nine people had been sent to each world, with an extra in both Widow's Mourning and Requiem.

The new silence of the World Between Worlds echoed in her ears, and Ayla crouched in the middle of her newly made square, the pain of what she had done causing what would have passed for tears from anyone else.

She had done far worse things than to lie to those who stood up to her though.

Directing her gaze to the sky, Ayla wondered what God would say about her actions, whether He would approve or disapprove. Although she had learned the most from Satan, she respected the Ruler of the World Above Worlds way more.

"I'm sorry, LightWind," she whispered into the night, before allowing a self-made breeze to carry her words and all reminders of her actions far away.
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Alone and afraid, although she would never have admitted it to anyone, including herself, Red sneaked into Bravery’s only tavern, a shuddering place that cast lengthy shadows into the void created in the rafters below.

However, Red refused to be dominated by darkness, and she stepped into the flickering lamplight of the room. Contrary to her expectations, not a single one of the old veterans noticed her entry, so absorbed were they in relaying on their battle stories. Courage and confidence flooding through her veins, Red strode towards the bar stools at the front and leaned herself against the side.

“I’ll take a beer,” she announced to the barista.

He turned, ready to serve, but he only shook his head when he saw her. “Ha! Get lost, kid, before I boot you out of here,” he replied, before turning back to the display case filled with wine, beer, and other forms of frothing liquor.

Sighing, Red resorted to begging. “Please? I don’t have a mama.” Sure, she shouldn’t play the mama card so casually, but she could not stand being ignored.

“None of us have our mamas anymore,” the tender responded, but sure enough, his face softened, and he filled up a filthy glass about a quarter of the way with something golden at the tap. Red’s face lit up, surprised the trick had worked. Her delight did not fade, even after he filled the rest with yellow water, swirling it around until the two mixed into one diluted drink.

“Mighty thankful, sir!” she cried as he handed it across the counter. In turn, Red proffered the coin she had found buried in the mud of the dandelion valley, but he shook his head.

“Keep that and buy yourself something nice to put your hair back with. A young lady such as yourself shouldn’t be wandering around in taverns,” he said, a trace of kindness fighting its way through the harsh curvature of his face. However, as if embarrassed by this display, he turned away, motioning for her to run along.

Red grinned, taking the glass and heading towards the rambling men who shouted at the shadows which cavorted above their heads. In their voices, she could hear the sounds of battle, and she watched the enraptured eyes of men who had fought against mighty beings of myth.

Tonight, all the men laughed and played Grimoire, perking up their ears as a veteran held up his copper arm and described a world, the likes of which Red had never heard before.

However, from where she stood in the middle of the room, Red could not hear hardly any bit of the story, and she huffed in frustration. The only logical approach now would be to approach the storyteller and plop herself down beside the others listening. For a moment, she wondered what her lovely mother, Heaven bound to the World Above Worlds, would have to say about her actions, but inside her heart, she thought her mama would agree.

From what the others in Bravery had told her, her mama had also been a story-collector. Without another moment of hesitation, Red pranced over to the table and plopped herself beside the man with the copper arm.

The others abruptly cut off their conversation, studying the girl who had emerged among them. When none of them said anything, Red took a sip of her beer, and announced to the table, “What are all you bozos staring at?”

That only made them stare more, and she rolled her eyes dramatically before turning back to the one-armed man. “Well, are you going to continue the story?”

“Didn’t your mama teach you any manners?” he retorted, raising an eyebrow.

“Do ya think I’d be sitting here if I had a mama?” Red asked. The others’ eyes never left her, so she just fixed her gaze on the man with the copper arm.

“Aww, lay off her case, Tinker,” a younger guy on the other side of the table piped up. “What’s your name, little lady?”

“You can call me Red,” she replied, doing her best to sound mysterious.

“I can see why,” he laughed, reaching across the table to tug one of her red curls. “How old are you?”

The others had all stopped their game, watching her and waiting for her answer. A quick peek back at the bartender revealed that he too stood and stared, his expression the epitome of hopelessness.

“I’m twelve,” she announced proudly. “How old are you?”

He laughed, and the others joined in. Unsure if they were laughing at her or with her, she smirked, raising her glass to her lips again.

“I like her,” the younger guy said. “I’m thirty-eight. Tell me, have you ever played Grimoire before?”

Red shook her head, leaning forward to study the layout of the card game.

Murry, as he later introduced himself, showed her how to play, asking his comrades for a single round with an open hand for her benefit. The next round, he dealt her in, and she proceeded to make it to the seventh hand before striking out.

The others around the table also seemed to warm up to her presence, gradually settling back into their patterns of storytelling, gambling, and drinking. Soon, the men were drunk enough that they didn’t even bother to censor themselves in front of the child.

“He was the biggest man I ever saw in my life!” Richie exclaimed. “As tall as a giant, and so big around that everyone at this table could hold hands and still not reach around his waist!”

Red, drink long gone, marveled at the tale.

“The sight was enough to make any man wet his pants. But I stood strong in the face of the impossible. I lifted my bayonet, and I ran forward, screaming like a madman, and the monster heard my feral roar, and ran away, frightened that he be taken out by a simple man. I laughed, maddened by adrenaline and half-crazed with insanity, and I rushed him, jabbing my bayonet into his back, and bleeding his guts out all across that frozen ground.” Richie enunciated each word, and Red felt him drive them home the same way he had forced his bayonet through those mounds of flesh.

She listened, eyes wide, as he described the gore that had covered him to his toes, stinking to high heaven.

When he had finished, he bowed, and Red clapped wildly. The others had all grown tired of hearing and telling the same tales again and again, yet in the face of an interested child, they competed vigorously to be the one to fill her ears with bravado and splendor next.

She commended each for the bravery, and it was only after Landon finished his tale that she spoke her mind. “I want to be a soldier too,” she declared.

Tinker—the man with one arm—glanced up suddenly, and the others all paused what they had been doing for a moment.

“A woman soldier?” someone laughed. “Keep dreaming, girl. You’re better off finding yourself a husband and taking care of the family. You’re a bright kid; go find love and happiness rather than waste your time with doddering old fools like ourselves.”

She knew he meant well, but Red still felt the sharp pain of rejection linger in her chest. “Women can be heroes too!” she proclaimed, face heating up. “I’ll prove it. Just you wait and see.”

Richie opened his mouth to correct her again, but Murry gave him a swift kick under the table. Even though the veteran was drunk, he got the point and dropped the subject.

Tinker however, had leaned forward, meeting Red’s bright green eyes. “What did you say?” he asked in a low voice.

“I said I’ll prove that women can be heroes. Wait and see,” she repeated.

Tinker threw a roll of coins onto the table to pay for the drinks. “You remind me of someone,” he drunkenly whispered to the girl, before he turned and stumbled out the door and away from the tavern.

Red shrugged, glancing back at her Grimoire cards, where a pair of Merchants rested behind her blurry eyes. With a decent bluff, she might be able to pull out a win.

“Hey, where do you live, Little Red?” Murry asked her.

“Oh, just with my uncle,” she said. Glancing up, she noticed Murry’s concern. The others were all too drunk to care, and even the barista had disappeared somewhere behind the counter. “Don’t worry, I’ll head home after this game.”

He nodded, satisfied, and Red slipped her second card facedown across the table and onto the draw pile. “I call seven,” she cried.

Murry laughed, and called her on it, laying a Knight on the table beside her. Red sighed as she flipped over the card to reveal the Merchant.

“Let me offer you a word of advice,” Murry said. “When you are bluffing, start off small and work your way up. If you tell a lie, include just enough truth that people don’t think it is a lie at all.”

Red nodded, storing the information away for later and laying her other card faceup on top of the table. “Thank you for the good evening, sir. Gents,” she added, acknowledging the others in the group.

Then, she left, slinking through the darkened shadows of the midnight bar, head buzzing with new stories.

One by one, Red added them to her collection: The Courage of Bravery.
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shallow focus of white dandelion


Leanna bathed in the dandelions, scattering their pigments everywhere, throwing herself into the weeds without regard to the itchiness they would leave on her skin later. She could have lain here forever without a care in the world…at least until she caught a glimpse of Red LightVale sneaking into the valley. Momentarily frightened, she crouched among the dandelions, allowing their tall stems to block her from view. For long minutes she cowered here, hoping that Red would go away.

“If you are trying to hide, you need to find a different set of weeds. Your butt is showing,” a trilling voice called playfully from behind her.

Leanna sprang to her feet instantly, smoothing down the back of her dress and turning in indignance to face her foe.

“Like you’re one to talk,” she huffed, crossing her arms. “My mama says to stay away from you because you’re a bad girl.”

Red’s face contorted into the silliest expression Leanna had ever seen, and she crossed her arms. “My mama says you’re a bad girl,” the red-haired girl mimicked.

Furious—how dare Red make fun of her—Leanna stomped her foot and stormed away. “I think you are too! Constantly wearing your hair down like that and never buttoning your dresses up… It’s no wonder only the boys will play with you! I bet you don’t even have a doll.”

Although she had hoped to maintain a stoic walk away, Leanna peeked behind her to see if her words had had any affect. They seemed to have, for Red’s audacious smirk had lessened, and sadness tinted the corner of her eyes.

“Wait, don’t go,” Red called. “I was only teasing.”

Leanna shook her head.

“If you stay here, I will tell you a story,” Red prompted, a genuine grin spreading across her face. Her freckles shone when she did that, jumping from one cheek to the other and across the bridge of her nose.

“Is it a good one?” Leanna asked, intrigued.

“The very best,” the older girl boasted.

Biting her lip for a second, Leanna wondered if there could be any harm in staying. Mama had told her to be back by sunset, and she still had a couple of hours to play. Besides, Leanna admitted, she was curious about why her mama told her not to play with Red. As far as she could see, Red was just like any other girl.

“Okay, fine,” Leanna said, walking back over to Red.

The other girl sank cross-legged to the grass, patting the area next to her.

“And I’m sorry about what I said, too,” Leanna apologized. The things she had said reflected through her memory, and she shook her head at herself. “It wasn’t very nice of me.”

Red laughed, pulling Leanna close and mussing her hair all up. Mama was going to be so mad. “Aww, don’t you worry your head off about it. Words can’t hurt me,” she winked. “After all, I control them.”

Leanna’s eyes widened in wonder, and she leaned forward. “Is that what your story is about?”

The other shook her head, sending her loose hair fluttering behind her. “No, my story is about…” and she looked around, as if searching for inspiration among the weeds, “a dandelion.”

Leanna settled down to listen, and Red continued.

“Have you ever wondered where dreams come from? Certainly not your own imagination, although sometimes, if you wish extra hard, a specific dream will find you. Yet, the best dreams float like wisps of clouds on dandelion seeds, searching for the perfect person,” she said.

With that beginning, she continued on, telling the story of a girl named Bella who wanted to know where dreams came from. One day, she met an old man who sent her on a journey to an Enchanted Forest. In the forest, she found a fairy, who promised to take her to the place that dreams came from. The fairy made a giant dandelion grow, and together they rode it through the air.

“Soon they had come to a different part of the forest, a place where dandelion seeds floated randomly throughout the entire sky, drifting across the wind as if nothing was amiss. Attached to these seeds were tiny bubbles…so tiny that Bella would not have been able to see them if she was her normal size.

‘Are those…are those the dreams?’ she asked the fairy.

The fairy nodded, reaching out and scooping the bubble into her hands before handing it to Bella. ‘Look closely, what do you see?’

Bella took it with one hand, still holding on to the dandelion with the other. Then, she studied the bubble, smiling when she saw a picture of a mom giving her daughter a giant hug—”

“Like me and mama!” Leanna interrupted, throwing her hands in the air in excitement. She could picture her mama giving her a big hug like in the dream, and she laughed.

Red fixed her with a glance and said, “Well, if you don’t stop interrupting, I’ll never be able to finish!” Leanna bit her tongue, resolving to remain silent.

Unfortunately, there were also nightmares in the bubbles, and one of them got loose. Together, Bella and the fairy fought it off with a dreamcatcher—one of the fairy’s special gadgets. Yet, they were too late, for when they had beaten back the first nightmares, all the others had gotten loose and were headed towards Bella’s village….

Leanna gaped as Red continued her story, weaving a web of words and magic, speaking about fairies and dreams and dandelions. When Red finished, “And she hung up the dreamcatchers all over town, and the entire village lived happily ever after,” Leanna sat enthralled, replaying the story in her mind.

“You’re right,” she finally said. “You are an awesome storyteller.” She leapt up in excitement then, adding, “And that was the best story I have ever heard!”

Red shrugged, a smile tugging at the edge of her face. “Maybe, maybe not. But I have even better ones…” She dangled the hook in front of the child as one would dangle a carrot, and like a rabbit, Leanna leapt upon the bait.

So saying, Red began another tale, painting the story with her hands and tone, and masquerading as other characters.

When Leanna’s mother came into the valley just before sun-down, shouting her daughter’s name, she stopped in shock, staring at the two girls who played in the valley below.

Leanna had been completely transformed, hair hanging in loose waves behind her back. Dandelion fluff covered her entire body, and she wore a crown made of flowers.

Leanna leaped up in dismay to see her mother, and with an apologetic glance at Red, she set her playthings down and followed her mother.

The next day, Leanna slipped down into the flower valley, wanting to find the dandelion crown Mama had forced her to throw away the day before. As if conjured through magic, Red appeared again, but Leanna cut her off before she could say anything.

“Mama says I can’t talk to you anymore. She says dreams don’t ride dandelions, and I need to keep my hair on my head.”

Red smiled though, a twinkle in her eye appearing. “I came up with a new story last night all about you!” she said as if she had not heard Leanna’s objection.

Leanna’s eyes widened, and she forgot all about the other things she had been trying to do. “For real?”

When Red nodded, Leanna sank to the ground at Red’s feet, in awe. “Please tell me all about it!”

With a toss of her red hair, she agreed, launching into her tale.
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Empress Serenity, Queen of Peace, Ruler of the Restored Lands, and Light of the East, contemplated the gray quill she held, as if uncertain whether to dip it in the inkpot or set the implement aside. One of many utensils to be found on her ornate writing desk, it was the simplest, yet also her favorite. After several silent minutes, she stood and approached the window, taking the quill with her. 

“I called you here for a reason, Noble,” she said, and at her voice, the man on the other side of the room straightened. She studied him in the waning afternoon light, barely making out his dimming eyes, sun-tanned features, and heavy-set form. 

She trusted few men, but although appearances could be deceiving, the Empress had not trusted anyone more than Noble since her early childhood and first betrayals. Sighing, she turned to stare outside at the palace courtyard. Guards had insisted on putting her bedroom in an easily defensible position with only one potential entrance or exit, but her study had been conveniently overlooked. 

A breathtaking view greeted her every time she stood like this to watch the world, and the sky seemed to hold a beauty impossible to capture in any other way. Chuckling to herself, the Empress smiled. When one was dying, they gained an entirely different perspective, one which the Empress had scorned her teachers for having years ago. However, a stab of pain twisted in the Empress’s stomach, reminding her of her reason for calling Noble. 

“I am dying,” she said, sparing no attention to blunting the blow for him. After all, she was the one who was dying, and the way she saw it, only she could complain until after she was dead. 

Still, he gasped, and the Empress turned to watch as a solitary tear trickled down from the corner of his eye. She did not suspect he had faked the emotion, for though Noble was smart, he was not cunning, and he had reason to be sad if she died. 

However, the Empress laughed at herself for thinking such thoughts. Her years of experience in espionage, warfare, and betrayal had served her well in all moments of her life except her last ones, for she now could gain nothing by assigning ulterior motives to her most loyal advisors. 

Strangely, despite all the failed assassination attempts she had experienced, the Empress was still afraid of death. The idea struck her as funny, so she laughed, throwing her head back and letting out the waves of joy as they shook her shoulders. Oh to laugh like this! It had been years since she had found something this funny! 

Aftermaths of the hilarity struck her again, and she wiped away a mirthful tear, chuckling still. 

“Oh, allow an old woman her fantasies,” she said, catching Noble’s horrified and concerned expression before he hid it. “And before you object,” she said, as he opened his mouth, “I am indeed an old woman, as I’ve been around almost 125 years…much longer than I should have lasted under other scenarios.” 

“Yet, we all knew these chemicals would catch up to me eventually, and I choose to use them anyway.” The Empress took a moment to reflect on her past choices. Deploying the biological weaponry had been a highly controversial decision, one which had garnered either much enthusiasm or much hate from all parties concerned. She had never regretted her choice though, for there had been no other way to win the war. 

Noble opened his mouth to speak again, and she nodded to him. Picking his words carefully, a habit he had had since childhood, he finally sighed and said, “Your Highness, with all due respect, what specifically ails you?” 

The Empress regarded her great-grandson with a matter of suspicion and annoyance. “Suffice it to say that I have seen several trusted doctors, and my condition has been declared impossible to treat.” Pain shot through her side again, nearly crippling her with its intensity, and she groaned despite herself, extending a hand to brace herself against the window. 

“But my death…” her voice, once so brave and confident as to never falter, trembled on the word. “My death,” she repeated, “brings up the matter of an heir.” 

She could see the situations playing slowly through his mind—for him, Noble, the first heir still alive, the throne would be his by right. Instead of validating his thoughts, though, she sighed, for this was why she had called him to her office. 

“I wanted you to hear this from me, rather than from servant’s gossip, but you will not be my heir.” She allowed him a moment to process what he had just heard, and she realized it had been unintentionally cruel of her to subvert his expectations in this manner. 

“Your…Your Highness?” he questioned, the hurt, betrayal, and anger showing in his tone. 

“Please, Noble,” she said. It had been an eternity since she had used the word. “You are not fit to be the Emperor of the largest domain anyone in Requiem has ever held. You are not a leader, and though you have tried to bend your inner nature, you will always be one to follow others.” 

His face somehow fell further, if such was possible, but the Empress paid him no heed. “If you were king, my councilman and advisors, who I do not trust within an inch of my face, would take over the policy making of these lands. You are the only one among them whom I trust, but I have other plans for you. I hope you will not harbor any resentment towards your grandson, for he is who I have decided will take my place.” 

Noble nodded. “I love my grandchildren, and I only want their success.” The Empress believed him. 

“Good. Please counsel your grandson and keep him doing the right thing. Give him wisdom and keep the others from snapping him up and gobbling him whole. I will help you train the boy while I am still alive. I will show him how to handle the advisors until he can take them all in the palm of his hand. I will show him the ropes of leadership, and I have faith that he will hold them well,” she said. 

“It will be as you desire, Your Highness,” he replied. 

“Bring me Prince Bronx then,” the Empress said. 

He stuttered through his next sentence, saying, “But Your Majesty! Surely you mean Prince Ezra—he is the eldest, not Bronx.” 

“Ezra is cruel and power-hungry,” the Empress sniffed. “Bronx is kind yet firm, bold yet cautious. He will make a better ruler, although his brother will likely be jealous and attempt to hurt him in some way or another.” 

“Your Majesty,” Noble tried again. “He is but a lad. Young, inexperienced…” 

“Do you not know who I am?” the Empress laughed, fixing her great-grandson with a raised eyebrow. “I have held this throne for 109 years, having taken it when I was only 16. In a few years or so, Bronx will be 16, and if we train him well, he will do a better job than any man in this entire kingdom.” 

The man opposite her swallowed tightly, but again he nodded, resignation settling into his features. “I will bring the prince.” 

The Empress nodded, and he turned to leave, stopping only at a word from behind him. 

“Thank you, Noble,” she told him, the words exiting her lips before she could stop them. “I appreciate your help.” 

He inclined his head but left her office rooms. The minute the door had closed behind him, the Empress sank to the floor, curling up from the agony the sickness produced. A light whimper crossed her lips, but she held back further cries for fear of alerting the servants outside to her distress. 

Biting her tongue until the taste of blood filled her mouth, the Empress savored the taste of the iron-rich substance for a moment before standing and hobbling back over to her writing desk. 

The gray quill was somehow still in her hand, and she considered it again. She had signed three important documents with the quill: a declaration of battle, an order for the biological warfare to continue, and an order for peace. 

Everyone had thought her mad for starting a war at such a tender age, yet Serenity had proved the victor, decimating the enemy’s forces, strengthening her own, and declaring herself to the world and her own cabinet as a ruler not to be trifled with. 

Now, she lifted the quill again, dipping it in the inkpot before her. With a trembling touch, Serenity signed her name to the top-most document in the stack of papers before her: the paperwork giving her kingdom over to her great, great, great-grandson. It was surprisingly easy to gift a kingdom, and Serenity knew that if she died before Bronx reached eighteen, she still wanted him to be the one responsible for carrying the world in his hands. 

Blowing on the ink to dry it, she took the treatise to her bookshelf, pulling down The Remains of Power. It was a suitably dry book, yet it held a certain significance, and Serenity smiled as she slipped the document inside. No-one but her would touch it. 

Having done so, Serenity returned to her desk, resolving to wait and scarcely move until Noble brought the young prince. 

~ ~ ~ 

In Bronx’s defense, thirteen-year-old boys were not expected to maintain proper decorum at all moments, even if they were a prince. 

Still, it was not a good look for him to be sulking in a corner in ragged clothing nursing a bloody nose when Grandpa Noble came to find him. 

“Should I even ask what happened here?” Grandpa asked. 

Bronx leaped to his feet in shock and dismay, shoving the bloody cloth behind his back, and holding his head high. “If you must know, I got into a fight,” he said. 

“And lost, from the looks of it,” Grandpa replied. “What, thought that if no-one knew you were a prince, then they would give you a run for your money?” 

Surprised, Bronx puzzled over the statement, before replying, “How did you know?” 

“I was once a boy like you too. And it turns out you were right, which means you need to get stronger,” he laughed. “But you look atrocious, and we certainly can’t have you going to see the Empress like that.” 

Bronx could feel his eyes widen as his entire body trembled with excitement. “I’m going to see the Empress?” 

“Yes, but only if you hurry and clean yourself up. Put on the best clothing you have and get one of the servants to help you. This could very well be the most important day of your life, but you need to hurry. The Empress does not like to be kept waiting.” 

Buzzing in anticipation, Bronx scrambled to his feet and took off running towards his bedroom. “Yes sir!” he cried. “I will be fast!” 

A half-hour later, he stood outside the Empress’s door, fully dressed in fine robes, hair slicked back with gel, and twisting his hands nervously behind his back. Grandpa Noble opened the door, considered him a moment, but finally beckoned him inside, where he entered, bowing deeply. 

“Tell me, Prince,” a woman said from across the room. “What were you doing before you came here?” Bronx risked a glance upwards, watching the woman on the other side of the room. Her black knots of hair were piled on top of her head in a staggering display, and her brown eyes were piercing and commanding. She looked young, despite her age, and Bronx found himself thoroughly captivated by the ruler. 

As he studied her, he noticed she was doing the same to him. The Empress sighed, gesturing for the two of them to stand. Bronx refused to lie to the Empress, yet he did not want to tell her the truth either. 

As if sensing his hesitation, the Empress said, in a kinder tone, “Honestly, please.” 

“I was fighting,” Bronx said, staring at the ground in mortification. “Your Majesty,” he belatedly added a moment later. 

“Did you win?” the Empress asked. 

“No, but I know where I went wrong,” Bronx said. 

The Empress nodded and smiled. “Then you have found the secret to success, boy. But keep in mind that a good prince and future ruler will not pick needless fights either.” 

Abashed, Bronx nodded, waiting for the Empress to continue. 

“Tell me, Bronx, if you were the Emperor, what would be the first thing you did?” 

He had never thought about the question before, knowing that it would be impossible for him to ever make it that high in the hierarchy. “I think I would ask for advice,” he said. 

“Advice? From who?” 

“Someone I trusted, like Grandpa Noble,” Bronx replied. The Empress glanced across at his grandfather and chuckled. 

“He is a good man to trust,” she said. “But what if you didn’t trust the people around you?” 

“I would replace them with people I did trust,” Bronx said. “And I would ask them for advice instead.” 

“What if the people you trusted all gave you advice that seemed wrong? Would you listen, or would you do your own thing?” 

Bronx hesitated, stumped by the question. “It depends on whatever the thing was. If it was really big, I would probably do what felt right. If it was something small, I would let them have their way.” 

The Empress nodded. “We think alike, I would say.” 

“That’s good, right?” Bronx asked. 

“Depends. If you asked the councilmen, they’d say nothing was worse. But I like who I am, and I like you, too.” 

The Empress liked him? Shock reverberated through his every bone, and he could not believe his ears when the Empress told him to approach her desk. She studied his eyes, and Bronx attempted to bring them back to a more normal pupil dilation. “We can teach you,” she said, coming to some hidden decision. She opened her mouth to say something else, but her face contorted and clenched tightly as if she was suffering from some form of hidden pain. 

“Your first lesson with me will be some time next week. I will send for you when I am ready,” the Empress said. “Until then, Noble will take over your immediate lessons, and you will join your brother in his.” 

Two thoughts crossed Bronx’s mind at the same time: I am going to be nobility! But boy is that going to be a lot of work.” 

“One last thing before you leave,” the Empress said. “Right now, you are a cub, small, cute, and weak. Before I finish with you, you must become a tiger: big, fierce, and strong. Keep that in mind as you train. You are a prince for now, but soon you will be a King.” 

Bronx nodded, storing the information away for later, not entirely certain what it meant. 

“Now get out of my sight,” the Empress finished.


Author's Note: This is the second short story in a series I have begun known generically as the Requiem Chronicles. Set in Requiem, a dystopian fantasy world of my own devising, each of these stories so far was inspired by a prompt from the incredible Thalassa Brytaye! I would love to see more photo prompts in the comments below. I look forward to hearing from you!
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