Microstory 120: Ellen Snider

Microstory 120: Ellen Snider

A Story by Nick Fisherman
"

This is an experimental Bellevue Profile microstory. The introduction can be found in Microstory 101. More to follow.

"
When Ellen Snider was a child, she was a brilliant musician. She wasn’t said to be at prodigy level, but she was particularly excellent at reapplying the skills she had learned from one instrument to another. Her single mother built her a soundproof room in their house so that she could practice whenever she wanted without disturbing others, or being disturbed. She was incredibly intelligent, but she suffered in school because she refused to complete the work. Her mother spent countless hours arguing with her about it, stressing the importance of being a well-rounded individual. After years of poor grades, Ellen finally began to work harder in tertiary school and found herself gravitating towards the sciences. She went on to study marine biology in college and ultimately found a job performing experiments in the field. Though her love of music never went away, she never regained the amount of interest she had in it when she was younger, and she was glad that her mother forced her to study other things. As an anomaly, Ellen started out being able to levitate over the ground. She could propel herself upwards at a 90 degree angle, give or take only a few degrees, which meant that she wasn’t able to fly forwards. She never thought this to be a very useful ability, and all but forgot about it as she grew up. But everything changed when she met the love of her life. Levi was able to fly as well, but had his own set of limits. Theirs was the first case wherein an unbreakable connection of soul mates altered the nature of abilities. After years of being together, they both started losing their restrictions. An encounter with them came just before a chain reaction in Bellevue that caused the same thing to happen to many others already within the organization, proving that there was something all anomalies had in common, even though they were the results of different genetic engineering.

© 2015 Nick Fisherman


My Review

Would you like to review this Story?
Login | Register




Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats


Author

Nick Fisherman
Nick Fisherman

About
BE SURE TO READ MY ONGOING NOVEL SERIES, THE ADVANCEMENT OF MATEO MATIC PUBLISHED VOLUME 1 (2015): http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/624899 2016 Installments: http://www.writerscafe.org/writing/N.. more..

Writing
Test Test

A Story by Nick Fisherman