The Strongest Jewel

Her name was Akyia.

She flitted from lily pad to lily pad. Hardly a ripple disturbed the still, starlit water beneath her wispy feet. The moon bathed her hair, flowing and translucent, in white light.

Akyia’s gemstones also glowed at night. Like all Shiaz, her body contained seven jewels: one in her forehead, her belly button, and over her heart; and one each on top of her hands and feet. They were all sapphires, save the ruby over her heart.

She was young. A girl, yet on her way to becoming a woman. She surged with life and energy. Her misty feet lighted on the grasses and she burst into a floating run, gliding across the land, around the world. Carefree as a breeze through the lilies.

She paused only to stroke the great Elk King. He stood among the herd, antlers proud and silver and unhunted, for the Volos had enough treasures to last many lifetimes. They had no need to hunt that which was rare, for no rare thing existed. Treasures abounded in any Volos home.

Her fingers caressed the Elk King’s muzzle. At the contact, she turned solid in the night: a ghostly white girl, draped in a fine thin dress. Her jewels stood out on top of her skin. Her eyes shone blue as her sapphires. The Elk King stepped back, bowing his head, and she turned translucent once more.

The moon hung low when she returned home. Just beyond the glade, she saw a light. It wasn’t blue or white. It was yellow.

Peeking through some bushes, she saw it was a Volos man with a lantern. He wore a bag slung over his shoulder and walked slowly, head turning from side to side as though taking note of everything he saw.

His presence surprised Akyia. There was much trade between the Volos and Shiaz, but it usually occurred in the Nurture Market, where the Volos were allowed to cross into Shiaz lands. And it also only happened during the daylight. She’d never seen a Volos at night before.

When his back was turned, she dashed past, zipping through the forest until she reached her home high in a giant oak tree. Her mother and sister slumbered on their beds of velvet moss. Her father was gone as usual--he was a protector, out near the far borders of their lands, guarding against dark forces. Akyia paused, wondering if she should wake and tell her mother of the Volos man. She decided it could wait until morning.

   *                  *                 *
When morning came, she forgot.

She went about her day as usual--tending the forest, the rivers. Breathing life into gardens. Harvesting and helping her mother cook for the Shiaz in their village. When the warm glow of sunset bowed before the diamonds of the night, Akyia ran off to visit the herd of the Elk King. She liked to play with the fawn.

But she couldn’t find them. She circled their meadow, then the treeline, then went back to the meadow. Then she saw smothered grasses and silver blood reflecting the moonlight. She bent down near the blood, heart pounding, her ruby gemstone flickering. Tears filled her eyes.

She looked up and gasped.

No one had snuck up on a Shiaz before, but somehow, he had. Moonlight cast the Volos man’s features in either white light or shadow. That was all she saw before he reached out, faster than a heartbeat, and wrapped a cold hand around her transparent wrist.

At once she turned solid. Before she could react, he snapped something heavy around her ankle. Blind panic seared her senses, and Akyia lashed out, swinging her free hand and kicking her free foot.

The man laughed and knocked her down with one blow, making sure his contact with her skin never broke. He clamped more heavy things on her, metal bands weighed down with cords attached to metal balls.

Unable to move, she did what she’d never once done in her entire life: she screamed. She channeled all her terror and rage into her voice, willing it to reach all corners of the world.

He slapped a hand over her mouth and squeezed her throat, killing her voice in seconds. “None of that,” he said quietly. As he released her throat, something appeared in his hand. She realized it was tape right before he smeared the stuff across her mouth.

Akyia felt new contact on her wrist as the man stood up, and saw now that he wasn’t alone. A woman in a cloak sat beside Akyia keeping that necessary contact--the contact from a living creature that trapped Akyia in a body of flesh. Without it, the bands would have no hold.

“Move fast,” said the woman’s hoarse voice.

The man went to a bag and pulled out a rod. Something clicked and the rod lit like a devilish red hook, which the man lowered to the sapphire jewel on Akyia’s right foot. “All too easy.”

Every part of Akyia screamed in silence. The glow of her jewels flickered madly, prompting the woman to laugh. “Look at the light show she’s giving us.”

Her body writhed, but to no avail. Sharp heat burned the top of her foot. It lasted only two seconds, but when Akyia’s jewel came free, the loss was unbearable. Strangely, no pain or blood seeped from her foot, yet it felt like her foot was completely gone.

He moved swiftly to remove the gems from her other foot and two hands. That left the three crucial jewels over her forehead, belly button, and heart. When he removed the sapphire from her stomach, Akyia felt sick. She wondered if she was going to die.

She closed her eyes against the red light when he brought the rod to her forehead. Heat erupted all around her face. This gemstone put up a fight; pain exploded everywhere as he held the rod there, wriggling and jiggling her forehead. But in the end, it gave up, providing relief from the heat but numbing her senses.

He bent down near her chest. “Last one.”

“I’ve heard--” the woman hesitated. “I--I’ve heard that removing the heartstone kills them.”

The man’s face hovered over Akyia’s, his face shining greedy and menacing in the red glow of his rod and Akyia’s ruby. He shrugged. “These gems will make us king and queen. Those freaks won’t be able to touch us.” He lowered the rod to her heart. “Once they get over her, we can take more. They’re so weak anyway.”

Why? Akyia thought desperately. When you have everything? The Volos need no jewels, they have their own! Why, oh mother goddess, why?

Heat pierced her chest. Akyia felt everything--anger, pain, love, sorrow, hope. She held on to everything she could, from her memories to her passions, to those things held dear and special in her heart. She was no mere carrier of jewels: she was a creature with love and dreams, and she would fight in any way she could. Even if it wasn’t enough.

Pain blossomed from her chest. This is the end. 

But her ruby would not give in. The pain and heat grew until they mingled in a sort of red fog, a fog that suddenly grew vast but distant. She saw the faces of her family, of her friends both Shiaz and elk, and felt only love. She was scared to die, but she was proud of how she’d lived.

Then the heat dampened. Through the daze of her trauma, Akyia saw the man back off her so fast that he fell over.

And the woman let go.

Somehow Akyia pushed her broken body of light and wind to move, and she flew away from her bonds, from the ground. A giant streak ran past and Akyia gasped. It was the Elk King, as proud and magnificent as ever, though he ran with a limp and silver blood seeped from his hind leg. But his silver antlers stood unchallenged, and before the two Volos could pull their weapons, the Elk King did what any defender would--and the two Volos fell, never to move again.

Akyia floated over to the great elk. He sank to his knees and nudged a bag on the ground with his antlers. The bag held her jewels, their lights extinguished.

She’d never lost her gems before, and didn’t know if she could simply put them back, but she had to try. She fingered a sapphire and pressed it against her forehead. She didn’t know how long she waited, but when it was clear nothing would happen, she covered her face with her hands and sobbed.

“At least I’m alive,” she said over and over. “Thanks to you, mighty King and friend.”

In the gentlest of motions, he nuzzled her ruby jewel. She placed a hand over it, eyes closed. Her heart swelled from the love and sacrifice the Elk King had shown. The feeling spread, rushing through her limbs, filling her gem-less places with warmth. The warmth grew and grew until red light enveloped her.

The Elk King nuzzled her cheek. In those brief seconds of solidarity, her body felt fresh and new, and she finally saw why. Ruby jewels shimmered on her hands, the top of her feet, her belly button, and her forehead.

Joy burst inside her like a sunrise. She stroked the Elk King’s shoulders, and pressed the ruby on one of her hands against the wound on his leg. Red light swirled until blood stopped falling and the gash in his fur grew faint.

“Thank you forever and ever,” said Akyia, every part of her tingling with energy. “Now, let us warn and protect our people.”

Rainbow Jar


Kayla leaned back from the mirror, fluttering her thickly curved eyelashes. Shadows of violet and burgundy shimmered across her eyelids. With a final flourish, she brushed a tube of lipstick over her soft lips, puckered them tight, and rose from the vanity.

Waves of golden hair bounced on her shoulders as she clacked along in her high heels. From her glassy apartment to her green Lamborghini she strode, head held high, with her leather handbag in place. Less than fifteen minutes later, she was saying good-bye to her gorgeous ride and heading into an elevator.

During her trip to the tenth floor, she admired her reflection in its mirrors. She liked what she saw: a woman in her mid-twenties, full of health and beauty, ready to blow a puff of beauty into the lives of others.

A harp melody sang from her purse. She pulled out her smartphone and brought it to her ear. “This is Kayla. Yes, I’m almost there. Is it ready?” A pause. “Brilliant. Let’s give them a rainbow.”

She exited the elevator onto a floor of glass and shine, very much like the elevator itself, and full of sharply-dressed people working at their computers or hustling from place to place. A few nodded or smiled at her as she passed and she returned the gestures. Finally she entered a large conference room.

A group of people sat around a table speaking in low voices. A projector lit a giant screen at the head of the room, but it wasn’t the screen that held their attention--it was the fiercely glowing jar at the end of the table.

Kayla set her purse aside and placed a well-manicured hand on the jar’s smooth base. The jar was large and elegantly designed.

“This,” she said, and smiled as the whispers died down, “is a rainbow.”

The hues danced and dazzled inside the jar, never fading, never breaking. They changed intensity as they twirled, like a rainbow fading from brightness to the faintest hint of color splashed among the gray clouds, before flaring bright again.

“We humans have a thing for color,” said Kayla. Her fingers caressed the jar as she spoke, feeling the intoxicating warmth of the energy inside. “Color is beauty, is life. Color is everything, and nowhere is color as perfected as in nature. We’ve tried, of course, to replicate it--we have technology that projects colorful lights of all designs onto our walls and ceilings.”

For a moment the display of colors sparkling across her palm distracted her. With a sigh, she pulled her hand away and focused on the mesmerized faces before her.

“Here at Glamora, we’ve done the impossible. We’ve captured the colors of the most beautiful flowers, and even the very essence of butterfly wings. We’ve created products that fill people’s insatiable need for color and beauty.” She sat on the edge of the table beside the jar, her hands on her leg. “Products in makeup, lights. Holograms that you can manipulate. Scents.”

She turned and held the jar in both hands. “Now we can capture rainbows. We don’t know why they move as they do, once contained, but the effect is breathtaking. We’ve learned we can break up rainbows to fit inside glass spheres small enough to fit in your hand. Rainbows soothe and captivate the soul; rejuvenate, even. Of all those we’ve captured, they have yet to fade.”

A woman at the table raised her hand. “Kayla?”

“Yes.”

“Are there really no downsides to this, no negative side effects? Seems a serious thing.”

Kayla laughed. “Not that we’ve discovered.”

The lie rolled off her tongue as easily as any sales pitch. Well, she wasn’t completely lying; their rainbow-capturing technique was so new, and the effects so unstudied, that who was to say the effects were truly negative? But yes, things had happened when the rainbows were taken from the sky. A grayness had formed, spreading in incomprehensible ways and dimensions. But no one really noticed . . .

Then there was the other effect of those who had physically touched a rainbow. What followed was a near madness, near lust, to have it always close by. Several of their team had to be treated--for what, the doctors weren’t even sure. Yes, the rainbows did have an extremely positive effect, but only when viewed from a distance.

Up close, they seemed to do something different. And Kayla and her company knew it.

My Blue Marble


I fly.

Not with wings nor wind fly I, but strapped in a capsule of metal and flame. I launch into a vast blue sky swirled in white. Navy, royal, midnight--and darkness fills the screen. Good-bye, my blue marble.

Just dark and stardust. Twinkling everbright, neverending. Lights streak past--

And I’m on the moon.

And so are other people.

Our buildings are stone and white as the stone cold moon. No sun to see by yet, but there’s lamplight somewhere, lighting the ground against the dark of space. We walk around, dressed warmly of course, for it’s chilly here. There’s moondust . . . somewhere . . . but not here. Below my feet is lots of rock. Bumpy, holey, stretching for miles--well, for one mile at least--until it falls away and space begins.

If space begins. It doesn’t.

I wave to people by the buildings as I go on my walk. I leap from crater to crater, leaping here and walking there, at my leisure. Convenient, that. No one needs gravity anyway.

I pause. I breathe. An infinite space of stars and wonders surrounds me. I will never get enough.

Then I see it.

The sun. It wasn’t there before. Where’d it come from?

Blinding white, it crests the Earth. It swallows my planet whole. People are running--the sun is bright, too bright. Into the buildings they go, but I stop and stare at my missing world. Bad idea! Light blasts my eyes. I look away, back at the moon, spots flickering in my vision. Everything goes from cold to sweating. The moon glows and glows, erupting in light, bursting to flame.

Why are we here? I can’t remember. We need our planet--the one that doesn’t catch fire from the sun. I want it.

Like a switch, light off. The sun is gone. The moon returns to stone, white against black and stars. Earth is gone.

But it can’t be. There weren’t that many people here on the moon. Where is my world? Where is life? It’s boring, too, to live forever on a rock.

My eyes adjust and I look down. I’m wearing a spacesuit now; no helmet, but there is a pocket! I reach inside and pull out a blue marble. Blue with swirling white.

I toss it into space. It flies, it shrinks, it disappears. My heart flies with it. Then there, right there before me, a world grows. It grows until I see shapes. Lands, nations, oceans, storms. I feel the life--animals, trees. People. People loving and laughing and helping. People hating, people starving, people crying. People living. People dying.

My marble grows until blue and green and white and brown are all I see. Good-bye, space.

I leap to my Earth.