Stealing FateA Story by ArchiaEternity would allow me to wander my past, and to wander to future I would have gained.It seems like only moments ago I was whisked away. Off
into the reality of my past, the reality of my future. But not, the reality of
my present. I left the present, stole it from my own grasp, gave it to someone
else. A little boy it was, sitting on the street as they do, crying. They all
cried. Why wouldn’t they when they knew they would never experience life like
we do. They would never get to slip into their life once they died. This
was boy was one that would be born again, another life he would have to suffer
on the many he had already bore. There was only one way to change it, to take
this boy from his written fate. He needed a life. So I gave him mine. I took
his hands in mine and smiled, he tried to protest, for my new fate would be
worse than his. But I was firm, and grazingly I gave him my present. The
present now he would live in, till his death came when he was let to wander the
Otherlife. Where there was no bad. I would get no such sanctuary. Eternity
would allow me to wander my past, and to wander to future I would have gained.
It was for me to mourn what I had lost, to punish me for touching the book of
fate. But I will not let myself mourn, when there is one less boy crying out
there. That at least, is what I tell myself. Today I was diving through the sea, letting the water run
through my hair. It felt cool, a difference to the sun that splashed onto my
face as I surfaced for air. I flicked my head to let the water roll from my
eyes, blinking in the shoreline. It was close. My companion waited upon there.
In this moment, I questioned how this past could make me mourn, how it could
not be wished for instead of feared. I pushed my arms through the water,
allowing my feet to match their motion. I never made it to the shore. It came
in suddenly, shrouding my sight in an instant. There was nothing left, nothing,
not darkness not light, nothing. The memory though remained. This was what
happened when one touched fate; to suffer forever in the memories of the past
and future, only to return to nothing. Regret. But it was not regret, it was so
much more than regret. I walked through the nothingness, there was little more
to do. Walking, sitting, either way it would be the same. Yet I had my saviour.
The little boy, whose name I knew not, who somewhere out there was living the
present I gave him. The knowledge of my deed let me gain an escape. An eternity
it would be that I would wander this place that held such fear it had no name.
The only way out was to die. But it was impossible to die here, when there was
no means. To wrap the hands tight around the throat was a simple thing.
Difficult though, no matter how hard you held, to die. It wouldn’t let you.
Death did not exist. I was taken to my future on this day, walking through
flowers. There was a meadow amongst my feet, petals grazing my knees. I hoisted
my white chiffon dresses up above the stalks, feeling the wind brush the veil
against my back. Around my sat smiling guests, before, a smiling man staring
lovingly at my grace. Recognisable. He took my hand, lifted the veil from my
face, and two words slipped from his lips; ‘I do.’ But I never got to make my
agree. The nothingness grasped me as a hungry predator, I, it’s deserving prey.
I was left to revisit my actions, to take strength from that which I had done.
I flickered to the boy, the crying boy who had yet lived so many lives. How
terrible a fate it was that his had been. But why had I felt pity for him?
Others I had seen, who held the same future as him, others I had heard cry out
in anguish. But this boy was different. He had not acted differently, he was
just different. It was the past that entered me as I toiled. I was as a
child, standing by the bedside of a young man. My brother. He was stroking my
hair as the tears dripped onto his hand. So comforting. ‘You’ll join me one
day.’ He said, and I nodded, knowing that I would. The machine continued to
beep beside him. “It’ll be for the best you know.” I nodded again; it was all I
could do. “And we will meet again.” I nodded, no longer in time to the now silent
machine. He never kept that promise. I was pulled from the memory as the
thought slipped through my mind, and in a moment it was forgotten as I forced the
boy in. This boy with brown hair, with fair skin and soft blue eyes. I could
remember every drop of his face, as if it were mine. And then I was stolen away again. But to where? My future
I knew it was not, my past it could not be so. I was watching, not there, not
really. There was an old man, staring softly at a young woman, breathing hard.
She was looking at him, pleading it to not be so. But his time had come. Just
after a son was born. Closer now. A teenager was running, speeding through the
streets with an excited expression on his face. Cars stopped as he cared not to
look as his feet trampled across the road. He was running to his sister that
had just been given her first life. Closer again. There was a boy, walking
around the way, not caring where he passed. Slowly, a tear caressed his face,
and he stopped, overtaken by the feeling inside him. I knew who he was. A grandfather, a son, a brother, a
stranger. All one. Suddenly I was gripped again, flying through the place. And
I knew where it was that I had landed. The present. There was a man standing there, a solid expression
covering his face. I recognised him as he flitted into my sight. A husband.
Here this boy stood, older now, but still young. Four lives I knew him from, no
longer a stranger. He lived my present, but not my future. A knife lay against
his hand. I saw it as it glinted against the sunlight that dappled in from the
window. It rose in his grip, stopping against his heart. This was who I had given my present to, who I had given
all to. And there was no regret, as I saw the smile that came across his face.
There was no longer any reason to mourn. The knife slipped purposely from his hand. And this man, who
had looked at the pleading eyes, who had ran amongst the streets, who had
protested against a young woman. This man who had once lain to the beeping
machines, kept his promise, and rewrote the book of fate. He killed himself. He killed my present. He killed me. © 2012 ArchiaAuthor's Note
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StatsAuthorArchiaAboutReally, I'm just one of you. Come in, sit down, grab a cup of tea and enjoy a good read (now that may be a questionable statement). If there's anything in any of my stories that you want to be exp.. more..Writing
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