*Magnify*
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1701791-Indigo-Flame
Printer Friendly Page Tell A Friend
No ratings.
by Mereel
Rated: 13+ · Short Story · Fantasy · #1701791
A young girl finds a strange ring one day. Will it bring her everything she wants?
I stare at the ring, the pure black stone reflecting in my eyes. And my eyes reflecting in it.

My heart begins to pound faster and faster, the longer 
I stare at it. My head is beginning to spin. Or is the 
world spinning around me?
It feels like I'm falling into it.

Then a voice calls out behind me and the moment is 
lost.

"Girl, what are you doing standing about? Those clothes won't wash themselves. What's that you're gawking at?"

Before I can stop it, the ring is snatched from my 
hand, grasped between calloused fingers.

"Washed down the river, did it? Well, might fetch a 
decent coin at market. Devil knows we need it."

He looks directly at me and I think he sees the longing in my eyes.
He snorts, long and hard. Sounding just like the 
monster I secretly believe him to be.
"Reckon you'd like this, ey. Think it'll make you a 
proper lady, eh. Well, nothing will. A scrawny brat is 
what you are. And what you always will be. Now, get 
those clothes washed and get back to the house."

I don't, I jump at him, fingers outstretched, trying to grab it back. He quickly raises it over his head, lashing out with his other hand.
I fall to the ground, blood trickling from my lip.

I pull myself up onto my feet, turning back to the river, grabbing the nearest shirt and shoving it into the cold water, as the tears run down my face. No one is around to see me, not that I would care if they did.

I hate my father. I would give anything to get back at 
him, but he's right. A scrawny brat is what I am. I 
know he never wanted me. Never a day goes by without 
comparing me to his son, now having grown up and moved 
away.
Last I heard, he was serving as a soldier in one of the big cities.

Not that he wanted to stay here anymore than I do.
But he is a man, and able to make his own decisions.
Being taller than my father, who is squat and fat, 
didn't hurt.

I scowl, driving away the tears, hot angry thoughts 
burning through my head.
'One day I will be free of him. One day, I will live 
for me. I will live how I want.'

These thoughts keep me going through the day, a pulsing red hot core that burns in my brain.
They also keep me warm during the night, as I lie on my back in the attic, wrapped in a thin blanket, shivering from the draft that whistles around me.

I fall into an uneasy sleep, tossing and turning as I 
hear a gentle voice whispering in my head.
It whispers so softly to me, offering me wonderful things, all the things in life I have ever wanted.

I snap awake suddenly, my eyes flashing briefly with a 
deep indigo light for a second. I know what I have to 
do.
I make my way down to where my father sleeps. I can 
hear him snoring as I get closer.
The door swings open as I approach, without my even 
having touched it.
Not that I notice. All of my mind is focused on one 
thing. And there it is, just sitting on the rickety 
cabinet in the corner of the room.
It seems to be glowing, a glow that gets brighter when 
I approach.
My father lets out a deep, grunting snore, before 
turning over in his bed. I can smell the alcohol on his breath.
At least that means he shouldn't awake. I feel my hand 
shaking, as I reach out for the ring. If I have this, 
everything will be alright.

It pulses once as my hand closes around it, then again 
as I slip it on my finger. The band fits like it had 
been made for me.

Something seems different. Looking down at myself, my 
clothes have changed. Gone is my thin and worn shirt, 
the original colour having faded long ago.

Gone are my torn and patched trousers.
My shoes would have been gone as well, I'm sure, had I 
been wearing any.

In their place, are the most wonderful clothes I have 
ever seen.
A thick cotton shirt, white as pure fallen snow.
A long sleeved jacket made of animal hide with white 
lace on the cuffs, complimented by matching trousers, 
both dyed a deep indigo.
Heavy boots of thick leather wrap snugly around me 
feet.

Like the ring, these feel like they had been made to my exact measurements.
My hair is different, as well. Instead of being an 
untidy mess, it is smooth, tied back in a pony tail, 
held together by a indigo ribbon. The bangs held up out of my eyes by a violet barette.

Around my waist, is a strong leather belt. It feels 
heavier at the back, than the front.
Like something is hanging there.
I reach around, grasping it and drawing it out.
I am looking at a dagger, the blade made from the same 
crystal of the ring.

My eyes flash again. Almost like someone else is in 
control of my body, I stride towards my father, indigo
flames flaring around my feet as I walk.

I raise the dagger over my head, ready to drive it 
down.
Something wakes my father at that point, his eyes 
locking on me, wide with fear.

He makes to lunge at me, but purple flames surround 
him, throwing him back down again.

They seem to hold him, he struggles but can't get at 
me.
It doesn't stop him screaming at me, though.
Pleading, his eyes darting from me to the knife.
I ignore him. When did pleading do me any good?

The sound of his pleading brings back memories of all the times he beat me. And the pain comes back with it. The most painful is the bruise on my cheek where he struck me today. The pain from that particular wound flares, as more purple flames flow across it. The bruise and the pain fades, but the flames don't, leaving a constant mark on my skin, that twists and flickers.
My anger boils over.I let my hands fall, the blade sliding into his throat.
He gurgles, trying to draw breath, blood pouring from 
his neck.

I watch, as he draws his last breath, drawing the blade back out. The blade is clean, strangely, as I slide it
back into the sheath.

Without looking back, I turn and run out of the house.














© Copyright 2010 Mereel (mereel at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates have been granted non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1701791-Indigo-Flame