Ocean Blues by K. Leigh

I raised my arms upward, praising the sun which was warming my skin as my feet sunk into the sand with each step. It was finally summertime and I couldn’t have been happier. The shore felt like home. The smell of sunscreen and salt water were better than the scent of cookies baking in the oven. No one could ruin the next five days in paradise.

I set up my spot and settled down. After applying tanning lotion, I pulled out my book and began to read while allowing the sun to kiss my flesh. Every so often I glanced away from the pages of the novel to check out some of the guys walking by. A smile from time to time when they met my eyes, but nothing coming out of the exchange.

beach, boys, creature, fish, friends, girls, jellyfish, ocean, shark, shore, swim, tan, vacation, water

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“In My Hometown”

This wasn’t supposed to happen. Not in our little town. It was supposed to be safe; one of those towns where you never needed to lock your doors. Everyone knew each other and waved as they passed by. It was supposed to be normal.

For me, it was a normal day. I was walking home after school with my friend Bethany. Most days we walked home together. Her house was on the way to mine so I usually walked part of the way alone. However, we had a science test coming up, so I stayed at her house to study. We studied most of the night, so her mom made us pizza for dinner. At about eight o’clock, I said I needed to get home. Bethany’s mom offered to drive me home, but I lived only ten minutes away, so I said I would walk. My parents knew I was on my way home, so everything should be fine. I grabbed my backpack and headed out the door.

It was a peaceful night out. You could hear crickets chirping and the fireflies were scattered in the grass. I was almost home when a burgundy car pulled up beside me. I didn’t think anything of it. People always stopped us when we were walking home. It was a safe town. What I didn’t expect was the woman to get out of the car and smile at me.

“Hello. My name’s Roxy. What’s yours?” the strange woman asked.

“I’m sorry,” I replied. “I’m not supposed to talk to people I don’t know.”

The lady smirked. “But you do know me. I just introduced myself. It would be rude for you not to do the same.”

Her logic, to my fifteen-year-old self, seemed sound. My parents taught me never to be rude.

“Annabel,” I replied. “My name is Annabel.”

Her next movements were a blur. I remember feeling a sharp prick in my arm, then I got dizzy and blacked out. When I awoke, I was in a dark room, tied to a chair by my hands and feet. I couldn’t see the woman anywhere.

“Hello?! I yelled, desperate for someone to hear me. “Is anybody there?!”

I heard a door open and footfalls on stairs. I couldn’t see who it was, as my back was to the stairs.

“No need to shout,” I heard the strange woman, Roxy, say. “No one can hear you.”

At her words, I began to cry. “I just wanna go home. Please, I won’t say anything, I promise.”

The woman laughed. “Yes, but I don’t really believe you. Besides, I’d rather have you here with me. You can be my little plaything.”

I didn’t understand what she meant by “plaything,” but it sounded ominous. She reached out and tucked a piece of my hair behind my ear. I pulled away, still letting out little sobs. I didn’t want her to touch me.

“Please…” I whispered. “I just want my mommy.”

“I’ll be your mommy now,” she said, tapping the tip of my nose. “You’ll be my little Annabel. Would you like to see your room now, Annabel?”

I nodded, sniffing. She untied my feet and then my hands. I stood, trembling, as she walked with me up the stairs, holding my hand the whole way. When we got to the living room, I stepped on her foot hard and ran for the door.

I got to the door with her right behind me. She grabbed my arm, but I lifted my elbow and felt it contact her face. While she grabbed her nose, I pulled open the door and ran screaming. I was surprised to see we were in the same neighborhood that I lived in, only streets away from my house. I could hear her running behind me, but in my panic, I ran as fast as I could. People were coming out of their houses and looking at me. I went up to the first person I saw and stood in front of them, panting.

“Call… 911… Kidnapped…” I managed to get out.

I looked behind me, but the woman was gone. I had run only about five houses down from where she was holding me. When the cops came, my parents were with them. It was about 6 am the morning after I had been taken. My parents held me as I told the police everything.

They went to the house that I was almost certainly the lady’s house. They found it empty with the burgundy car gone. They did find the chair and rope down in the basement, so they knew it was the right house. They also found, in a decorated spare bedroom, the skeleton of a little girl, about five years old. She had been dead for many years, and the police suspected that the girl was the daughter of Roxy, the woman who took me.

They didn’t tell me this, but I overheard them telling my parents. I began sobbing, thinking of what I might have escaped. But, to me, my town would never be safe again.

friends, hometown, kidnapping, neighborhood, parents, short story, walking home from school, writing

The Haunting Past by K. Leigh

“Could you tell us more about your relationship with Ethan Morris?”

“Yes. It all started when I saw him in the park near my house…”

I was on my normal grocery run. Well, it was more like a walk. The store was only three blocks away and passes a nice little park on the way. I walked there every day to pick up what we needed for dinner; and it was not much seeing as it was just my mother and I. She normally was out at night anyway, but I made dinner for the both of us because the night I do not make two plates will be, with my luck, the night she stays home.

That day was different. Usually I passed the park when no one was there, but he was. I recognized him, though. He was in my science class when I first moved here. He was a year older, but since I had a love for science they moved me to the senior class science class. Ethan Morris. That was his name. He was my lab partner because no one else in that class talked to me.

He was sitting on a bench reading a book. He was technically my only friend, if you could call it that. Science was not only my favorite class because of what we learned but because that was the only social period I had even if it was with only one person where we would talk about the Periodic Table of Elements. It is not like he would notice if I walked past anyway. He was back from his first year of college. He would not want to talk to me. He did not have to anymore.

For about maybe a week this went on. He sat there every day reading. I would just pass him and continue my normal routine. It seemed weird, though, he lived on the other side of town. Why would he come here just to read?

One day as I was passing him, he noticed.

“Hey! Tammy!”

I stopped and turned to face him. “Oh! Hey, Ethan! How are you?”

“I am good. Oh!” He stood up and grabbed some grocery bags. “Here, let me help.”

I blinked some and stuttered, “O…O…Ok. I’m right there,” I pointed to the apartment building on the next block. We started off our walk together silently until I gathered enough courage to ask him about college.

“It was good. I got into Harvard University, as you know. I am not going back, though,” he responded as if he would rather not talk about it. “I am taking some time off from college.”

I did not press the subject. He did not seem like the type to get into a fight, so I decided that it was just grade problems.

We reached the door to my apartment. I thanked him for holding the groceries for me and walking with me. I would have invited him in for a minute or two, however, our place looked like one big mess. It would have been embarrassing. He understood and took his leave. I sighed a bit wishing I had cleaned that morning. It would have been nice if I could have chatted with him for a little while longer.

“If you will excuse me just one bit…”

I nodded. The officer continued. “You knew him from school?”

“Yeah. He was my lab partner in Chemistry class.”

“Let me get this straight,” the gray-haired officer sat back in his chair. “This guy,” he took the picture of Ethan and placed it in front of me, “was your lab partner? And you started to see him about a month ago?”

I looked at the picture intently. “About a month and a half ago.” I saw the expression change slightly on his face. It looked as if he did not believe me. “May I continue?” I asked as politely as possible. He nodded. “Ok…well…”

Ever since then I would meet Ethan in the park and we would do something. We would usually go to the café in town and talk. I had never thought he would be really into books as much as he was.

That was all I ever did, read books and it was how I spent my life. Books took me to places anyone could ever dream of! Wasn’t that their point: to allow you to escape your own life? That was, in my opinion, the very point of a book. To find someone to converse with, after thinking in high school he only talked to me because he pitied me, was probably the second best feeling (right after finishing a good book).

At one point he started to walk me home after our meetings. I had waited for this, so I had cleaned the apartment. My mom was usually sleeping, but as long as we were quiet I did not see a problem with him being there. Asking him to come inside was where I had problems. I lacked the social skills to begin with. One day, though, I had beenpracticing.

“Um…would you like to…ugh…come in?” I looked down expecting total rejection.

“Sure,” he said with a smile. I looked up in astonishment.

“Really? Ok! I guess we can watch a movie…if that is alright with you…?”

He nodded his response and we headed inside the apartment.

After the movie he had to get home, and I had to start cooking dinner. I walked him to the door and opened it. Something strange and unexpected happened. He turned around and looked me in the eyes. ‘This,’ I thought, ‘only happens to people in books or movies.’

“Tammy. I need to talk to you.” I nodded. This was a huge moment for me. I was really excited. Was I finally going to get my first kiss? Maybe I would even get my first boyfriend. “I just want to say that no matter what happens, I will always be with you. I will always be protecting you.”

“What do you mean? What’s going to happen?”

“Nothing. I am just saying,” he smiled at me.

I nodded. I closed my eyes and leaned in, just like I have seen it done. This was my big chance! I had asked him in, and now, I was not going to lose courage! I waited…and waited. After maybe ten to fifteen seconds I opened my eyes again. I sighed and looked down the hallway.

“I blew it,” I mumbled to myself. “No wonder why he took off. Who would want to kiss me?” It was then, that my apartment got chilly.

“And now, I am here.” I smiled, but weakly.

“No offense, miss, but do you watch the news?”

I shook my head no.

“Read the newspaper?”

I shook my head again. “Just books.”

“I see. Well then…” He got up and looked out the window. “Ethan Morris was murdered.”

“How? When? It can not be true!” I felt the tears build up and fall from my eyes instantly.

“About a good three months before you started seeing him in the park.”

“That is impossible!” I yelled, for the first time in my life. “That is not true!”

“We do not know how it happened, but we found him in a lake near the Harvard campus. We are still searching for evidence and questioning suspects.” He handed me the file, but I did not care.

I got up, crying even harder. “Thank you for your time,” I managed to get out through the tears. I felt embarrassed and enraged. I ran out as the chill began to creep over me.

am writing, apartment, book nerd, chemistry, college, groceries, high school, murder, park, picture, police, reading

Playing Games

We were driving down I-95 on our way to Disney World. Yeah, it was a typical family trip, with my parents in the front seats and my little brother and I in the back. Even though I had my headphones on, I could hear the sound of his 3DS over my music. I pulled an earbud out of my ear and turned to him.

“Johnny, can’t you turn that down? I can hear it even with my headphones in.”

He glared at me. “It’s a boss level. I have to be able to hear it so I can beat him.”

My mom turned around from the front passenger seat and smiled at me. “Emma, can’t you just turn your music up a little bit? You know the music helps your brother concentrate.”

Yes, of course. Everything was about my little brother. It always was. He was diagnosed Autistic a few years ago, and now he gets to get away with everything. It just wasn’t fair.

“But mom,” I whined, shooting a death glare at my brother. “My music is already almost too loud. Can’t he just turn it down a little bit?”

“Be considerate. You know it helps him stay calm,” my mom said, turning back around.

I huffed and put my earbud back in. I turned the volume up as loud as I could, blaring Evanescence into my ears to wash out the sound of Zelda. At the same time, I was updating my Twitter for the tenth time today. This post read:

“Bored out of my mind. Brother annoying as always. When will this be over? #bored #annoying #littlebrothers”

I jumped at a loud cry from my brother. I took my earbud out of my ear again.

“Dude, seriously? Mom, do something.”

My mom turned around and gave me a look. The “mom” look. “Emma, you will just have to deal with it and be patie—–”

All I heard next was a screech of tires and my dad yelling “Oh shit!” We hit the back of the semi-trailer. I was wearing my seat belt, but my face slammed into the back of the driver’s side seat. I felt a secondary hit from behind as we were rear-ended. I felt the space where my legs were getting smaller as the car compacted. Once the noises stopped, I blinked and looked around. I could feel blood running down my head and a pain in my arm. I looked down at it and saw that it was bent at an odd angle; broken, then. My mom’s hair was covering her face, but I could see her moving a little. My dad groaned and turned around to look at us.

“Everyone okay?” he asked.

I replied, “I’m fine. Johnny, how are y…..”

I turned to look at my little brother, whose eyes were glassy and open. His head was tilted at an unnatural angle, his 3DS on the floor of the car with its music blaring. I reach over and nudge his shoulder.

“Johnny?” I said, my eyes tearing up and my voice going all wobbly. “Johnny, buddy, you okay? Talk to me. Johnny?”

He didn’t answer. He didn’t blink. He didn’t stick his tongue out at me like he normally would. He was gone. I felt like I was five years old again, scared out of my wits.

“Mommy… “ I said, tears streaming down my face as I looked back at my mom. “He’s not answering.”

My mom undid her seatbelt and turned fully around in her chair. I gasped as I saw a piece of her leg bone sticking out from under her jeans. She didn’t seem to care as she reached over and nudged Johnny.

“Johnny, sweetie, this isn’t funny. Sweetie, look at mommy.”

He still didn’t answer. He still didn’t blink. This wasn’t one of his games. He wasn’t playing around. He was… I couldn’t say it. I couldn’t admit it. Part of me wished that this was one of his video games and you get extra lives. I wanted him to pop up with a smile, telling us that he was tricking us. But he didn’t. He didn’t move. Wouldn’t move. Not ever again. My baby brother was gone.

brother, death, life, music, short story, sister, twitter, video games

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