I wrote this when my best friend told me that I couldn't write in-depth stuff. :P It sounded like a challenge to me. Hope you like it! :)
I spent my days looking up, at the sky and the
clouds and the birds—all the things I wanted to experience but never could.
It’s completely the same thing as that human story about the ‘grass is always
greener’, but for me it’s not just a simple want. It’s a longing that starts at
my heart and spreads throughout my body until I want nothing more than for the
world to tip upside-down, so I’d fall up and float away and feel the wind on my
skin and tail until I died in blissful suffocation.
My parents
didn’t understand. They would smile and nod at first, and then shake their
heads and mutter to themselves, “She’s turning out like Arial did, you know.”
But I was so much different than my ancestor, the beautiful mermaid who turned
into sea foam for revealing what she was to a human. While Arial longed for
land and love, I wished only for the unbounded beyond that the humans called
sky and space.
To compensate
for my solitude, I would sit in shallow water and stare up at the stars, those
fascinating pinpricks that shimmered and shone, appearing so close, like I
could reach my hand up and grab a few to light up the dark sea that was my
home. Unfortunately, they were miles and miles and miles away, just like my
unrealistic dream of soaring with the birds.
One night, I saw
a shooting star. I began to wonder. What if that star was actually a ship, like
the ones that sliced through the rough surface of the ocean far above my city?
Perhaps the star was similar to those wooden monstrosities, with cloth sails
and glass windows and a crude impression of one of my people, the ones humans
called mermaids, carved onto the front.
But it could
never be like those ugly man-made machines. If the shooting star were a ship,
it would be made of the finest stardust, lined with gold and dotted with
diamonds to sparkle just like the other stars. It wouldn’t require wind to
move, and it wouldn’t get tipped over in a simple storm. No, it would instead
stream through the limitless nighttime sky, going everywhere and nowhere, its
godly powers shining brightly after twilight and disappearing without a trace
come sunrise. But it would always come back, for there would always be
untouched places for this star-ship to explore.
Even the fish
were silent when I voiced my thoughts.
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