My Saving Grace
I scream
He spins
In the light
Like a book I read
But not
In the book
He was prepared
Ready
I am not
He spins
And I see
The look
Shock...
And just a hint...
Sadness
His short blond hair
His black glasses
Falling off
Wide
Shocked
Sad
Blue eyes
Blue
Like the sky he soared in
Blue
Like the lightning he protected me with
He falls
I scream
I sob
I sob for what I lost
An amazing man
Kind
Determined
Just
The only demigod
To add temples
Altars
Shrines
For all the gods
I sob for what could have been
A relationship
A marriage
Even Hera would approve of
Kids
With my brown hair
With his blue eyes
That are frozen
Like Khione
Who finally got
Her icy prize
And yet
I’m relieved
We stopped the bad guys
We saved the day
Again
Again
Again
We will always be the heores
But at what price?
And then
Then I am gone
Rushed away
On Tempest
His final act
And I’m on a beach
With an injured demigod
An aggressive music-loving pandos
An incredibly useless
Selfish
Fallen
Mortal
God
And Tempest
His venti
His wind
His horse
His ally
His friend
I’m sobbing
Distraught
Mad at everything
And everyone
But I tell Tempest
To get him
The one who died
No, is dying
The one who saved me
The one I loved
For real
Then he’s here
Broken
Dying
And my father
I realize
Where we are
A cruel reminder
Of what I already
Lost
Although
Nothing
As awful
As losing
Him
The god and the pandos are
Gone
Left
Told by my father
My broken
Lost
Wandering
Father
Tristan McLean
Who now has a new purpose
He told them
To get help
Help arrives
But
No
Too
Late
He
Is
Dead
He is gone
I cannot get him back
Left forever
Leaving me behind
Where I cannot follow
And I hate
Apollo
I hate
Hades
I hate
Zeus
Jupiter
Hera
Aphrodite
I hate them
All
But most of all
I hate
Loathe
Detest
With every single fiber of my being
Him
The murderer
Extravagant
Useless
Selfish
Self-proclaimed “deity”
Murderous
“Emperor”
Caligula
Caligula
Stole
Him
From me
My beautifu
Loyal
Just
Fair
Determined
Loving
Saving
Grace
My
Jason
Grace
Flames
Fire burns. Kiara learned this the hard way.
The flickering flame was irresistible. It constantly changed, orange and red and yellow and sometimes white. She leaned in. It warmed her face. Closer and closer. Her nose was almost touching it. She leaned back just a bit. She slid her finger up in front of her face. Closer to the candle, and then...
“OW!”
New Socks
Keith’s new socks were blue. They were black. They were turquoise, they were grey, they were white, they were green.
What Keith’s new socks WEREN’T was magic. And magic was all that matters in a world of fairies and trolls and goblins and dragons.
Keith was about 97% sure that he knew a spell he could perform, though.
Using a discarded wand of his brother’s, Keith leaned over his new socks, chanting, “Bippity, bibbity, bokks. Take these non-magic socks. Make them new, and magic in them imbue.”
Keith’s new socks glowed. They floated. They fizzed and popped a bit.
And then they stopped. Everything.
Keith excitedly pulled on his new socks. “Boppity, bokkity, bork. Did my magic work?”
Nothing happened. Nothing glowed, nothing floated, nothing fizzed, nothing popped.
Keith was sorely disappointed.
THE END
Free In The Forest
“Is it supposed to look like that?” I turned around and hung my head down between my knees in a ridiculous attempt to get another perspective.
“I’m not sure. The glowing seems a little odd, though.” My roommate, John, brushed his brown hair out of his eyes to get a better look. The orb we had built had just suddenly started glowing. We weren’t sure why.
John and I were engineering majors. Our challenge: to create an orb that could float. Our teacher, Mrs. Willis, had been incredibly mysterious about the entire thing.
Well, our orb floated. In fact, it flew! It was zooming around our heads. It seemed to be exploring the room. And glowing. Glowing brightly. So brightly, we worried someone would discover us. And then, it started humming. Softly at first, but then louder and louder. Soon, it was bright as a star and louder than dice in a cup. It was also getting faster. It was a bright flash by our heads, everywhere at once.
“What did you do to it?” I whisper-screamed at John. I had to scream loud enough to be heard over the orb, but at the same time, whisper quiet enough to not make excess noise.
“I just put a cool-looking purple stone next to it. That’s the only thing I can think of that may have affected it!”
“Well, where is it now?”
“I don’t know! It’s gone!”
“Well, that’s just great!” I glared at John. “Help me catch the orb!” It was all over the room. I snatched at it, but only grabbed air. John clapped his hands above his head to try and grab it, but failed.
Suddenly, it stopped humming. It stopped glowing. It stopped flying around the room. It slowly settled back onto our desk.
John and I looked at each other and made a unanimous decision. I snatched up the orb. John opened the window. I threw it out as hard as I could - which, admittedly, wasn’t very far. But it was enough to make it land in the forests our college overlooked, far, far below.
We started our orb again. This one floated - barely. But enough to pass. It didn’t fly. It didn’t glow. It didn’t hum. We never saw our original orb again.
But I went for a walk two weeks later. I told John it was for inspiration, but not really. I walked where I was sure that it had fallen.
It wasn’t there. Nothing. No wreckage, no ruins. Absolutely nothing.
It was free in the forest.