《Lullaby (Fable Saga Book 2)》Chapter 16
Advertisement
It’s 8.45pm.
Today’s Thursday, which is always a busy night at Biblio. So the earliest I should expect my parents back is 11pm. That gives me plenty of time.
Walking quietly up the stairs so that my friends in the living room don’t realize where I’m going, I try to picture the last time I rummaged through mom’s jewelry box. I would have been a kid back then, maybe five or six years old.
I clearly remember one sunny afternoon in Fall, left at home with gran while mom and dad were at the restaurant. While gran was in the kitchen making our lunch, I crept upstairs to my parent’s bedroom. I went for mom’s makeup drawer first, smearing first my lips, then my eyelids, with her pale silver eye shadow. Then I took the talcum powder from her dresser and sprinkled it all over my head, watching the snowy clouds of talc floating behind me in the mirror. I think I was trying to turn my hair whiter, which was pretty ridiculous, because it was already a very pale blonde. The finishing touch was a pearl necklace from my mom’s jewelry box, which I wrapped around my head like a diadem.
Pleased with my work, I ran downstairs to show gran.
I’ll never forget the look on her face as I stepped into the kitchen.
She immediately dropped the plate she’d been holding, her lip quivering as the porcelain shattered into a thousand pieces.
Her face turned pale as death.
She looked like she’s seen a ghost.
I began to cry, and she smiled then, weakly and distantly, wiping away my tears. She told me to go wash my face, and that lunch was ready.
But I knew I’d done something terribly wrong, and I’ve never looked inside mom’s jewelry box ever again.
Until now.
Closing the bedroom door quietly behind me, I walk over to the vanity. I sit down on the plush velvet stool, running my hands over the lid of the jewelry box perched in front of the mirror. My fingers explore the grooves in the rippling apple wood, carved by my gran as a wedding gift to my mom. I never noticed before, but the carvings are different to her usual subjects. Most of gran’s work has a woodland or a floral theme – oak leaves, acorns, irises and wild hares peeping out from dense foliage. Her art is inspired by the forest, the land. But these carvings are an ode to the sea, an oceanic love song wrought in wood and careful hours.
Just above the latch, a cluster of delicately carved seashells encircles two fish, swimming together to form a circle. The top strip is a riot of tiny sea snails, sea anemones, crabs and corals.
Advertisement
Taking a deep breath, I click open the latch on the box.
Inside, fine gold necklaces spill out of their trays, tangled up with diamond earrings, an emerald bracelet, and the pearl necklace I wrapped around my head as a child.
I lift the tray out of the box, and find more gold necklaces, a mother-of-pearl brooch, more pairs of earrings.
No silver rings shaped like sea snakes biting their own tails.
Damn.
I take every piece of jewelry out of the box, untangling the whole mess in case the ring is hidden in a clump of necklaces and earrings.
But a few minutes later, I’ve picked through the entire collection and I’m still no closer to finding the ring.
Fine. On to Plan B.
I swing open my mom’s wardrobe doors, standing on my tiptoes to reach the hatboxes she keeps at the top of the cupboard.
I open each of them up one by one, searching through old family cutlery, wristwatches, an azure blue silk scarf folded neatly around a large pocket watch on a chain.
But no ring.
I turn my mom’s entire wardrobe inside out, placing everything back perfectly in place afterwards.
Normally, I’d feel bad about scratching around in her stuff like this. But I’m still reeling from the discovery that she threw away all of gran’s things without telling me. My anger dampens my guilt, and I work quickly, searching her bedside table, the pockets of her spare handbags and purses, even the bathroom cabinet in my parents’ ensuite bathroom.
The ring is nowhere to be found.
I give up. Maybe she sold it or donated it to charity like the rest of gran’s things.
I sit down at the vanity, picking up mom’s empty jewelry box. I’m about to start returning its treasures, placing it back down on the vanity, when I notice a slight clinking.
Faint, muted. The sound of metal hitting against wood.
I look again inside the box, removing the light wooden tray.
Empty.
I turn the box over, shake it gently.
Clink. Clink. Clink.
Delicately, feeling like Alice peering down into the deep, dark rabbit hole, I feel around the box’s interior. There’s a momentary shiver against my fingertips. I sweep them over the same spot, and they brush against a filmy, feather-fine filament. It’s just long enough to pinch. I take a deep breath, and pull on it.
The wooden panel lifts up, revealing a secret compartment at the bottom of the box.
And there, lying bare against the rosy wood, is the silver ring.
My hands are shaking as I lift it up out of the box.
The metal is cold, as if it were made of snow rather than metal.
Holding the ring between my thumb and forefinger, I hold it up to the light. The sinewy serpent seems to twist, radiant silvery scales shifting and slithering, flashing between light and shadow as I turn the ring round and round.
Advertisement
I’m tempted to try the ring on. I want to wear it.
But an image flashes through my mind. The girl from gran’s story, turning into a sea snake as the sea witch placed a silver ring upon her finger.
This isn’t the same ring – it can’t be, I saw photographs of my gran and my own mother wearing it, human as can be, no scales in sight – but still.
Some dread boils up in my stomach at the thought of putting it on, even though I feel like it’s meant for me, has always been meant for me.
This ring was made for me.
I look at my reflection in the vanity mirror, as I hold the ring in the palm of my hand. I have this sudden, intense urge to hold the ring up to my eye and look at myself – at my reflection specifically – through it. I have no clue where the bizarre idea came from, but it tugs at the corners of my mind. Some memory, perhaps.
I raise the ring, and –
CRASH.
The sound rips through the house.
It came from downstairs.
I drop the ring, springing to my feet in an instant.
I’m down the stairs and through the living room door in just a few seconds, my hands pulled into fists, ready to go all Karate Kid on whatever it is I find.
What I find, however, is Jamie kneeling over the glass coffee table, which has finally shattered as my mom long ago predicted it would.
Jamie’s clutching my dad’s bottle of fifty-year-old Isle of Sky Whiskey, cradling it like a baby.
Almost half of it is gone.
Zee’s on the sofa, her hand over her mouth as she fights back giggles, while Grace sits stony-faced next to her.
“Ashling, oooh my god Aaaashling, babe,” Jamie says, reaching out to me. “S-sorry. I think I might have… might have… broken your table.” He giggles then, snorting with laughter.
“Why is Jade so lame?” She says, more to herself than anyone else. “Why does he look at every other goddam girl except meeee?”
“Jamie, put down the bottle,” Grace says. “You’ve had too-”
“Grace, Grace,” Jamie gasps, interrupting her. “You know… you know how much I fucking love you, babe. Seriously. But you’ve got to.. hic… you’ve gotta let go. Relax. Your mama’s not here now. You don’t need to be a good little… little… hic… church mouse for her all the time. I know how much you struggle, to be her perrrrfect little angel every… single… day. I love you.. so… sooo much and it hurts me to see… see you hold back so much. Don’t keep it… hic… bottled… Let it go. Let it go, can’t.. hold it back anymore…”
And with that she launches into a slurring rendition of Let it Go, until Zee starts laughing and clapping so loud that Jamie bows dramatically, falling over in the process.
“See, Zee understands. Right Zee? Yooou get it.”
Jamie pulls herself up, sloshing whiskey across the carpet as she swings the bottle in Zee’s direction. Zee responds by screaming with laughter behind her hands, her eyes watering with mirth, as Grace’s frown grows deeper, her posture stiffer.
“I’ve been gone five minutes and you’re already wasted?” I say, grabbing the bottle from out of Jamie’s hand. “What the hell Jamie?”
“F-fffive minutes?” Jamie slurs. “Try fifty. You were gone aaaages.”
“I’m sorry Ashling, we didn’t know what she was doing in the kitchen,” Grace says. She rises from the couch, pulling Jamie to her feet, which is quite a feat considering how tiny Grace is compared to Jamie’s leggy, statuesque height.
“We’re in the spare room, right?” Grace says.
“Yeah,” I say. “Zee, you’re with me.”
“I’ll come back and clean up the mess after I get her into bed,” Grace says, leading Jamie to the door.
“No need,” I say. “Just make her drink water. A whole lot. And make sure she goes to sleep without breaking anything else.”
“I’m rreally sorry Ashling, I really am,” Jamie says. “My mom will pay for it. One thing she’s good for. I wish she could b-buy me love. Then I could have him.”
Tears well up in her eyes, and Grace quietly says goodnight, gently leading Jamie upstairs to the guest bedroom.
“Let’s do this tomorrow,” I say, stopping Zee as she bends down to pick up a shard of glass from the coffee table. “I’ll send a text to my parents so they know what happened. I’m too exhausted to think about any of this right now.”
Zee nods in agreement, yawning loudly as she drags herself upstairs.
I follow behind her, knowing I should be worried about the parental wrath that’s sure to ensue in the morning, but too tired to care right now.
Before I crawl into my bed next to Zee, I go back into my parents’ room, and place the silver ring back in its secret chamber, just like I found it.
Later, I toss beneath my sheets, drowning beneath the waves of sleep.
A dark ocean of slumber.
A troubled, stormy sea of interwoven, bewildering dreams, haunted by a solitary figure.
Him.
Advertisement
- In Serial15 Chapters
The Solipsist
Every novel needs a main character, and in this case, it's a young man named Jacob Bates. Jacob is your average guy who likes books, television, and long walks on the beach. One day, Jacob was diagnosed with a condition that made his body frail and weak. This drove Jacob to focus solely on his studies, ending up becoming a fairly capable guy, despite his condition. The road ahead was looking great! That's when a little scene occurred between Jacob's girlfriend and one of his male classmates. Jacob's mood was a little lower than dirt from thereon. His motivation to pursue his studies, gone. This event caused Jacob to fall into the death grip that is a job in retail. One day, while Jacob was mopping the cold floors of the grocery store he worked in, a strange blue screen appeared in front of him, notifying him that the world was going through a change. Now if this change was a good or bad thing, he didn't know. But there was one thing Jacob knew for certain. He didn't have to mop the floors anymore. Author's Note: (This is my first story, and I would be very thankful if grammatical errors were pointed out. I could also take a few suggestions in the comments if you would. This is less a planned production, and more a little project that I'm winging as it goes. I will try and be consistent with at least 2 chapters a week. Also, as I am a completely new author, the number of words per chapter may fluctuate. The minimum will be around 1000 words, while other chapters may be 2000-3000. It will hopefully only get better with time.)
8 119 - In Serial29 Chapters
Partners In Death
Hoga Yasahiro, who wished for death as he lost all interest in life, comes to realize he's immortal as he fails his suicide attempt. Isozaki Izumi who is so afraid of losing those around him, has a complicated past that led him to lead a simple life with simple goals as he struggles with attachment. As events escalate, Yasahiro and Izumi find out that they share nothing but immortality; making their partnership very hard. With no clue of how it happened, they start investigating and asking questions for very different reasons. Yasahiro wants to end it, and Izumi wants to make use of it. They start sharing memories of dying, a heavy secret with traumatic effects, traumatic enough to unite them in the face of whatever that comes, as it won't be as bad as death itself, or so they thought.. A story of two immortals struggling to live many lives in a world that has more mysteries than they could ever imagine.
8 216 - In Serial10 Chapters
Crafter's Heart (Preview)
(LitRPG) A young man has gotten a job with Ludo, the AI who runs the video game Thousand Tales. That means he gets to move to a sea-surface colony off the coast of Cuba, working at a VR center with unlimited time to use the hardware himself. He also gets to watch what goes on in the building's lower floor, where rich customers use "brain uploading" technology to enter the game world permanently. As he grows in rank in Ludo's organization and within the game, will he end up as the cultist of a game-obsessed god? Or will the three brilliant women he meets help him become something more? This is a preview of a book, which can be found at https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B07JJCC5QL . It's a direct sequel to "Crafter's Passion" AKA "Gleaners' Guild", a version of which is on this site at https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/14593/gleaners-guild . You can understand this story without having read the first one. (Several chapters are coming here.)
8 119 - In Serial8 Chapters
Thieves Thrive From Failure
A naive thief who avenged her father from the Crimson Guards is now a fugitive in the city of Yeverii. Set in the time of noblemen to peasants, Griem's only goal is to see the city built on blood, crumble to pieces. Overtime she attracts the attention of the local Thieves Guild all while being held in the grasp of a more experience female thief, Aylie. Can Griem run from the clutches that start to close their distance to her neck? The story of two female thiefs, young versus experienced. [Updates every 2-3 days!]
8 78 - In Serial44 Chapters
Rebirth of the Great Sages
Millennia have passed since the last of the Sages walked amongst the people of Haerasong, all but lost history. Legends forgotten to most, they survive only in tales of old. Rook is no Sage. In fact, Rook is just a kid of fifteen living on the outskirts of his small village. When not helping his mother with work, he spends his days swinging a sword away in hopes of joining the guard of the region's capital. So when a group of strange cloaked figures appears one day, Rook finds himself thrust into a life of hidden secrets, formidable foes, unlikely allies, and a journey to ascend past even legends of old.
8 125 - In Serial15 Chapters
Shard
Wherever you go, whether it be be a bustling metropolis or wild and untamed lands, sentients of every race and creed have some sort of belief in the supernatural. Every culture has stories of mighty beings, incomprehensible in both nature and noticeably, malice. Though many once wished for these stories to be true, they eventually lost much of the significance they once held; yet, the people who told the tales in the first place left them there as lessons. Vital lessons, and more importantly, warnings. Because even though humanity and it's allies had taken to the heavens and prospered like never before, their actions had caused sleeping dragons to stir. Across the universe, a bitter war between mortal and spiritual forces is being waged. Humanity now faces extinction, and if we don't play our cards right, extinction is all but certain. But even though their adversaries have veritable gods among them, humanity still has a few tricks up it's sleeve...
8 175

