Elfwood is the worlds largest SciFi & Fantasy community.
  - 93528 members, 7 online now.
  - 58371 site visitors the last 24 hours.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal

"It was Strange" by Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal

SF&F Picture 4 out of 26 by Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal
 
Tag As Favorite
 
working title. Based off a dream I had. I call it a storem, cause its a mix between a story and a poem. Thanks for the Mod's Choice! It really made my day!
Add Bookmark
Tag As FavoriteComment

 

 

 

            It was strange, but true. That things I could hear and feel did not exist, but were real somewhere. Things that were unclear to others made sense to myself. And things that did not make sense to me, made sense to every one else.

            The Artist had buried things in the sand.

‘Hide them from myself’, he had said, ‘not from others’. They were always mindless things. Marbles, papers, pencils. Worth so much, yet so little. I came across a marble, red like the sea in endwinter. ‘My favorite’, the Artist said quietly. He was never really an Artist.

Just a name I called him.

            My Mother was never really my Mother, just a name I called her. She was the only one who took me in. She walked to the beach, like all the other Mothers. Wearing her scarf around her head, so the endless wind would not bruise her fair face.

To Dig

            ‘Dig in the sand for buried treasure’, said my Aunt. Her decrepit teeth smiling wickedly. She was never my Aunt, just a name I called her. All the Mothers dug up were sold to the Bike Men. Sold for food and clothes that the Bike Men had.

Sold for life

I visited the beach frequently. I spoke with the ocean and the wind. Their words had no meaning. Yet they were more comforting than anything I had ever heard. The creatures of the sea sang to my heart. The creatures of air recited poetry to my soul. Even the rigid sand gave me reassurance. Every thing was constant.

Reliable.

            The sea turned a dark ruby red as the sun burned dimmer and the wars across the ocean grew fierce once more. The wars had always been there. I never knew why. I could feel the spirits of past people in the ocean. They wept soundlessly and the ocean soaked in their pain.

So did I.

 The Mothers came home earlier because of the chill that lingered in the air. ‘Not right’, my Mother had said, ‘too early’. The Artist remained steady, always there, yet always not. Digging. ‘Skin twice as thick as ours’, said my Aunt, ‘can’t feel a thing’.

Not one thing

            I came to the Artist the next day. He was digging a hole for feathers. ‘Because I can’t fly’, he said, ‘I have no use of them’. I picked one up, the icy wind made my fingers prickle. The smooth feather was not of the color brown. Which was of the chickens who wandered near our home. It was pure white. A color I had never seen before. I looked up to ask.

But he was gone.

The Mothers did not go out the next day. They stayed in their small homes, buried in their beds of silk and cotton. My Mother grumbled, she wanted to leave the small confines. And so she did. To the beach.

She never came home.

I went out as soon as I was able. The wind cried into my clothes. It was mourning a death. The sea swept thick waves of tears. Washing the liquid ice onto my feet. The water had something else, but I could not say. I could never say. ‘It is too thick’, said the Artist. He was behind me.

‘I know’, I said.

My Aunt cried for days, ‘So young’, she said, ‘far too young to leave us’. I had no Mother now to gather things by the sea. So I had to leave to the beach myself. The sand was hard and resisting. Its cold particles pierced my fingers and I could feel its detestation at my touch.

It hurt me.

I could find no trinkets. The Bike Men stared at my empty hands with confused looks. I could find nothing, so I could have no food. My skin began sinking onto my bones. As if it was too tired to go on any longer. My body began to shrink and so did my Aunt’s. We both grew too weak to dig.

We were dieing.

It was strange to die. At first it was painful. My stomach’s teeth seemed to attack my insides relentlessly. My eyes began to lose their touch and the world disappeared around me. The day my Aunt went away, was the day I truly died. It was after that I felt no pain at all.

Nothing at all

I had found my way to the beach. The water would not speak to me and the wind had tired and gone elsewhere. I screamed at the invisibleness before me. I knew where I was, but my body and mind seemed to be separate. My mind was in the ocean. Futility listening to its absent whispers. My body was in the sand. Deteriorating into nothingness.

I was alone.

‘You have come’, I could not turn to see the Artist, my body was gone. I wanted to run to him and feel his soft heart beating against my cold one. I wanted to feel. ‘Go to the where you belong, you have no place here now’. I should have known what he meant, but I refused to think such things.

I discarded such thoughts.

The ocean was mute and the wind was hushed. Even the sand beneath my feet was no longer resisting me. It was gone. All the things in my life had abandoned me and even the Artist seemed to banish me.

My constant life was gone.

‘Dig!’ he ordered harshly. His voice cut through me, but I was suddenly on the ground. Pawing through the sand. The beach felt like dust between my nonexistent finger tips. It spread away from me. Even though I was not truly touching it. And I soon found what I was supposed to find.

Feathers.

Pure white. A color I had seen only once before. I remember the Artist’s words. ‘Because I can’t fly. I have no use of them’. I was terrified. ‘Fly’, he breathed, ‘Fly to a place where such silly things as hunger and violence are not present. Fly far and forever, listen to the wind. It will guide you,’

Save you

The feathers flew from my hands and encircled me. I had never cried before in my life. I wished so much that I had. Because I could no longer. The Artist was in front of me, his warm hands held my face. He kissed me on the forehead. ‘Good by, precious soul. May our lives intertwine once again.’

I was gone.

 

 

←- Because I Care | Carefully Placed Thoughts On A Template Of Emotion -→

DateNameComment 
16 Feb 2006:-) Louie Ruggeri
That was great. I love how it makes you think, and how it wraps your brain around the contours of this unknown world.

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thank you! I'm so happy it had such a nice effect!"
16 Feb 2006:-) Averil 'Boar Warrior' White
Very good - as a poetry writer I particularly enjoyed the mixture of story and poem...very interesting writing, and had me hooked until the end. Thanks!

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thanks for the nice comment! I'm glad I had you hooked!"
23 Apr 200645 Im not trying to be mean...
That was beautiful simply touching awsome i wish i had dreams like you...You are a genius

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thank you so much! Thats really nice!"
6 Jun 200645 Glyn hopkins
Wow that was breath taking but it has left me unsatisfied!!! I want more!!!

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thank you for the nice comment! I have another poery/storem coming soon! Check in a few days!"
9 Aug 2006:-) Chris A Jackson
This has a very interesting rhythm that I find intreaguing. It's almost poetry, almost prose... very cool.

What gave you the idea to do that?

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thanks! I was trying to make it a little bit of poetry and a little bit of prose. I actually did this style once before with http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/29031150/?qo=42&q=by%3Ayourbutt+sort%3Atime+-in%3AscrapsIt's another one called Voices, and that's when I first tried the style out. I just thought it sounded cool! ^_^"
15 Nov 200645 Anonymous
I couldn't help but be reminded of the character from The Ear, the Eye and the Arm, Trashman, when I read the pieces involving the Artist, though I know that the two characters have fundamental differences (I don't know if you've ever read the book, but if you haven't you should). Great read. I loved how the narrator's lifestyle really danced with the themes and the setting. She's like a gypsy of not location, but thought. Love the storem delineation as well 2

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thank you for the comment! I have not read that book, but I will most definetly have a look at it! ^_^"
21 Dec 200745 Annah
This is just so good and it gets me so inspired! You've done a great job and truly earned that mod's choice 12

:-) Diana 'Artemis' Moon' Schmuckal replies: "Thank you!"
2 Jan 2008:-) Gwenivere Stephan
Oh wow, great story, very well written. Obvious Mod's Choice! I liked the style, it was dreamy and added to the feel of the story. I also, of course, liked the ending! I kinda had a feeling but it was a surprise of sorts anyway. Great story, super job!
5 Jan 2008:-) David Christopher Meredith
This piece is truly evocative and excellent. The efficiency of your quality of expression is superb. I would hesitate to call it a story though. It reads much more like free verse poetry. It doesn't really TELL a story I don't think, but it certainly conjures visions and summons impressions. It feels almost as if I am dreaming myself when I read it.

Very, very good.
6 Jan 2008:-) Ryelle Sophia Hill
Oh wow, that was like a waking dream! The Artist reminded me of the Giver from the book of the same name. [A VERY interesting book!] That was absolutely beautiful congratulations on mod's choice! You definitely deserve it!!! If you check my profile, I say 'I adore the quixotic world of dreams' this is like chocolate to my soul!!! I must print this and read it every day!! The scenery also reminded me of the beach part at the end of The Wee Free Men [by Terry Pratchett, also amazing] once again, this was just lovely!
Page: [1] 2
Not signed in, Add an anonymous comment to this guestbook...    

Your Name:
Your Mail:
   Private message? (Info)



About 'It was Strange':
 • Status: OK
 • Created by: :-) Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal
 • Copyright: ©Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal. All rights reserved!

 • Keywords: Artist, Poem, Story, Ocean, Beach
 • Categories: Magic and Sorcery, Spells, etc.
Modpick •  Mod Pick at: 2006-02-11 08:00:15
 • Views: 888


More by 'Diana ´Artemis´ Moon´ Schmuckal':
Every Thing, Yet of Nothing at All
Musa-Epilogue: The Stages
Memories of Magic: Part I - Memories of Nothing
Angel Wings
Memories of Magic: Part VI Memories of Rememberance
Memories of Magic: Part IV Memories of Innocence
Memories of Magic: Part V Memories of Something Lost
The Heavens
Memories of Magic: Part III Memories of Comfort

Related Tutorials:
  • 'On Teen Writing' by :-)Elisabeth A. Wilhelm
  • 'Building Stronger Story Themes' by :-)Timothy Pontious
  • 'Narration on Narration' by :-)Amanda B. Melheim
  • 'Writing in English as a Foreign Language' by :-)Inger Marie Hognestad
  • Art Education Finder...
  •  
     

    Elfwood™ is a site for Fantasy and Science Fiction art and stories created by Thomas Abrahamsson and helpful assistants and moderators, owned by the Elfwood corporation.

    [More...]