Chapter
One
She was a fool for
believing in their tricks. She was an idiot for not trusting her instincts. She
was stupid and dumb and a whole list of other things she didn’t need to name
because she already had!
She was stuck, and she
had been for a while. Now very well accustomed to the ever lying smell of rust
(even though on the four steel walls and ceiling of glass, so blank it drove
her mad had not a molecule of rust) and the silence so deafening that if
she screamed that she felt that she wouldn’t hear it. The prison itself was not
very big. Cascade had a feeling that
once she got out, she would have extreme claustrophobia. Or perhaps she would
gain agoraphobia! Either way she would not be leaving this experience unscathed,
mentally, or physically. She hated everything about it because there wasn’t
anything! It would drive her crazy; she just knew it.
At first, that wasn’t
even her concern. Not the insane inducing prison that she couldn’t
escape, but that she was trapped in the most helpless and even downright infuriating
way too! Chains at her wrists, preventing her from using her magic and
inside box. Some sort of prison, she assumed, that was made specifically for
powerful people. It taunted her with the glass roof, so clear she didn’t even
think there was glass at first, showing her exactly how close
freedom was. Of course, it also showed that she would die from the almost
always winter climate from which she could just feel the cold emanating through
the glass, giving the tiny prison a cool atmosphere, but that wasn’t quite her
concern. It was more concerning that she couldn’t get out. It was even
more impenetrable than even Astria’s bubbles! Something more powerful than all
of them. More powerful than the person who can gain any power at any time,
perhaps a variable, so to speak. More powerful than the person who was said to
be the most powerful magic user in centuries. Heck, it was more powerful than
the ones who helped design it!
More powerful than the
one responsible for these people. More powerful than the person who was sent to
watch over the two children, years younger than her, and more powerful than the
person sent to look after the power of an uncaring student.
More powerful than
Cascade, controller of oceans and storms. More powerful than Cascade, sister of
River.
River… Cascade had never
even said goodbye. Never cared to try and fix what little scraps of
relationship that the two siblings had. It had never even crossed her mind to
say ‘I love you’ the last time the two had met. In all honesty, they barely met
at all. And now, they never would. At least that meant River was safe. That,
Cascade was eternally grateful for. That was one of the only things Cascade
would thank every higher power for - the same ones that she cursed for allowing
the others to get captured. And yet, they were also the same ones who she knew
watched over them in particular. Why would the most powerful people in
eons (Cascade knew she was exaggerating, but so was everyone else so she had a
right to as well. Besides Millie was able to fit the claim, anyways) be able to
come together without them? No coincidence could have come to this. SAFE,
the oxymoron of the name of a Superhero school that sends its students to life
endangering missions, couldn’t pair up people like them.
Or at least, that is what
Cascade told herself. If the gods were watching them be tormented like some,
some sick game! If that was what was happening, she supposed that the gods had
no mercy, and yet still Cascade hoped that they had given it all away to River
along with the families and friends of her allies.
Not allies,
she mentally chided herself, forcing herself to admit exactly who she had let
down, ‘friends.’ She absently picked at her chains, hating how she was far too
familiar with the way they felt around her wrists, and yet still she winced at
the little spark that came off of them as she mulled over her fate. When she
had first woken up, along with realizing who she was truly helping, she vowed
to break the chains using any means necessary. She tried desperately to
rip and tear at the near ancient runic symbols carved into the metal cuffs that
had her contained, preventing her from using the abilities born within her with
little success. She pulled at the chains as if her strength would magically come
back, and even if it did she knew deep down that they wouldn’t be able to be
broken by any human alone. It was a hopeless little gesture, but it was one she
thrived on. It was a gesture that made her hope she still had a chance.
She remembered when she had
tried to escape once, without a plan and being purely reckless. She had tried
to wait until the door opened to give her the bare minimum of food, like she
was some kind of dangerous animal they needed to weaken, and before the
door closed she bolted toward it. She remembered the feeling of adrenaline
course through her as she took the risk and remembered the feeling of pure fear
as she felt the shackles start to materialize chains and tether her back to the
room. The blank, colorless, stupid room. It made her feel
colorless, somehow. She turned around so she saw the glowing, slightly purple
haze of the magic chains as she tried to tug at them, tear at them. Even
a crack.
As she willed tears back,
“Please!” She called out, “You can end this! You can save everyone who suffers
here! Just let me go! We can help everyone!”
She screamed, pleaded, for the guard who had come to show mercy and
release her, albeit with slightly sweetened words. She knew that he had
been in the very same room! He wasn’t like the other guards. He was strong,
the magic power inside of him seemed to come off of him in waves. None of the
other guards even had magic!
It was why she had
decided to try the plan with him. And as she cried for help, still
tugging with all of the little strength she had at the chains, he left,
emotionless, robotically. If she didn’t know any better, Cascade would have
thought that he didn’t hear her. But then, for a miniscule instant, they
locked eyes. His eyes, as fleeting of a glimpse she had gotten at them, were
blank. Empty. And, in all honesty, she didn’t doubt hers
looked the same. Cascade stopped
struggling for a second. The door,
ironically the key to her freedom, was slammed in front of her, and she
physically recoiled from both the sound and the realization that no one would
help her.
That, of course, was when
she still had hope within her, determination coursing through her veins and the
need for justice sharp within every fiber of her being. She knew she would be
able to escape the confines that held her! Then she would find her friends and
help whoever they needed to. She would get justice for everyone involved,
defending the weak and protecting the innocent!
Those moments passed
quickly, and what little bouts of energy she found to have during them grew
shorter. She found herself tired, and as she started to scream pleas into the
sky, like those she had heard so long ago, pleas that were made up purely of
deceit and lies, it was then she realized that no one was going to help her.
Still, she convinced herself to be patient. To keep whatever strength she had
left in hope it would be useful for later. If anything, she started surviving
off of pure spite. If anything, she started to live off of the thought that if
she survived she would beat the Shadows and defend the people she needed to
protect. She was going to help everyone. She just had to wait.
Eventually, what little
shard of a plan that she had was thrown to waste as she realized a few key
things. Whatever strength she had kept was gone, whatever thoughts of hope were
starting to vanish, and little by little, she was beginning to break down.
Little by little, she was becoming resolved to her cruel fate.
As the days turned into
weeks and weeks into months, her motivation to get out began to leave her. She
knew that as soon as she ‘broke’ she would become even more broken. She would
do whatever anyone told her to do. She knew that as simply as she knew the
chains on her wrist were doing it. They wanted Phoenix and Astria and Rando,
yes. But they wanted Cascade as she was the most ‘useful’ to them. Cascade was
able to bend the waves, something that could control everything from trade
ships to farms. Phoenix was powerful, no doubt about it. In fact, Phoenix was far
more powerful than Cascade was. But her
powers were only useful as a weapon. Cascade was useful as a weapon and
a tool. Cascade knew they saw her as something they could use. Something
powerful if they could control it.
Her eyes widened in
shock; it. She took a second to realize what she had thought. She had
stopped referring to herself as a person for a second. She was starting to see
through the eyes of those who contained her. They were starting to break her,
through beating her or through other means. She was hurt relentlessly, but she
knew that there was something else. There had to be some other
contributing factor.
These chains suddenly did
not seem like simple chains, though she had always known that they weren’t. She
was being stubborn and was blocking it out, but she needed to read them
carefully now. She didn’t want to, but she knew she would do it eventually. She
would rather find out what they did now rather when it was too late.
She read them carefully,
taking the time to examine and place what each runic glyph did. She saw how
they fit into each other and how they helped weaken her. She saw that they were
actually necessary to her survival, as breaking them would break the dome and
let the blizzardy climate of the Shadow’s realm into her prison.
Well, that was both the worst
and best news she had received since she had arrived. All she had to do was
break one or the other, the dome or the chains, and she would be out!
She would be free to die
of hypothermia in the frigid atmosphere of Mt. Aclipsa, or however it’s
said, she thought, rolling her eyes. Theoretically, she knew that she could
survive in any atmosphere with water. She was trained for anything. And yet,
she would have to use her powers, something that was restricted by the chains.
If she broke the dome, which was her best bet as the chains were unbreakable
(or so said the runes), she might need to break the chains separately. It was
strange, almost like how squares are rectangles, and yet rectangles are not
squares. The dome was a product of the chains, but the chains and the dome were
not exactly mirrors of each other. There was a slight chance that if she were
to break the dome somehow, the chains would not stop working. This meant if she
broke the dome, she may or may not possibly die.
...Was death truly better
than what would happen if she were to keep the chains on? That thought,
although as fleeting as it was, terrified her. It terrified her that her mind
was ready to go to such lengths to escape this hell.
Well, then, she had to
get out of there. She had to get out as soon as it was humanly possible. Still
she couldn’t do anything, and she waited. She waited for months and found that
the slight hope she still had was fading slowly. Too slowly it seemed, for the
people who would make her work for them as soon as she broke wanted her to be
under their control long ago.
She realized that they
were getting impatient. She realized they were going to kick up the caliber of
her torment. That they were going to start to fill her with fear or agony.
Something to make her snap sooner. Something to make her lose hope that her
friends and herself were never going to escape. Something to make sure she
wouldn’t rebel and attack her…
If she broke, what would
they be to her? Enemies? Tormenters? Captors? She wouldn’t break; what was she thinking about!? And
yet, in the empty space, where the only new thing was the smell of blood, or
perhaps, every once in a while its metallic taste would enter her mouth as she
bit her tongue, every unanswered question that was possible to find within her
mind was welcoming. She dwelled on it, far longer than what was healthy. It was
a term she didn't want to accept.
She was still going to
get out of there. If anything, that thought spurred her into what little action
she could take. She started planning, and calculations ran rampant within her
mind. She wouldn’t let anyone but herself win. She would stay hopeful and
strong. She would escape. She would break the chains. She would dissipate the
dome. She would escape with the others with her.
Life wouldn’t be that
easy. It never was, and it definitely never would be. Her captors had been
planning. Planning to make the process of her enslavement quicker. She would be
under their command soon, very soon. And if it wasn’t then they would make sure
that she had a reason to be under her command.
So when the very person
she had prayed to never step foot near her there, River, her usually cheerful eyes now
desperately trying to find somewhere, anywhere, to escape from here,
walked into the doors of her prison, chained with the same stupid runic
symbols on her wrists, Cascade froze. She started, pitifully, to reach her hand
out to her sister before pulling it to her chest. She grit her teeth in what
would have seemed like anger, but River knew better. And the tears that she had
held in for months, perhaps even years, fell down her cheeks like her namesake.
It hurt, because they taunted the both of the sisters, water being so
agonizingly close and yet, they both were unable to control it.
“C-Cascade..?”
“I’m sorry...” Cascade
started apologizing to River like it was her fault that River had been
caught, but then… “I’m sorry! I-I I’m sorry, I’ll do whatever you want! That’s
what you want me to do, right? Don't hurt her, I’ll come… I will come with you!
Please,” Cascade pleaded like she did when the chains formed, all those
weeks, or perhaps months, ago; “Just let River free and unhurt.” She
resigned herself. She knew exactly what they would do. Cascade knew they would
hurt an innocent if only to make sure that Cascade was on their side. It just
so happened they seemed to know the exact person that would make her comply the
fastest. Someone that they didn’t even need to threaten to hurt because
they had already hurt her. Someone that
would snap Cascade into selfishness, that would make it so the greater good
just didn’t apply.
“Cascade? What are you…
saying?” River knew exactly what Cascade meant about coming with them. She knew
exactly what was going to happen to herself and what would happen to Cascade if
her sister went through with her words. It was not the thing Cascade was
agreeing to that troubled her and riddled her with confusion. It was the fact
that Cascade was going through with it. That Cascade was surrendering herself
to them. That the stubborn, justice seeking and brave sister River had grown up
with all her life was giving herself up. She was scared about the fact that
Cascade had lost her spirit - the one that would hold on to everyone to stay.
The hope that was always part of her, etched into every fiber of her being, was
gone.
River was not confused
about what Cascade was doing. River was confused about the fact that Cascade was
doing what she was doing. Perhaps it was impulsiveness? Seeing River could
have filled her with emotions, and she would resume having hope and being
stubborn. Maybe Cascade would soon resume being her kind, brave, and hopeful
self right now!
That was when River saw
what she hadn’t seen when she had been dragged in. She saw Cascade’s bruised
legs. She saw Cascades weak, beaten arms, which had marks from pulling the
chains that had restricted her for so long. She saw the clothes she wore were
torn and bitten and red. She saw the bandages that Cascade had, always red and
pulled too tight.
But none of that
concerned her. Nothing about anything that she saw there concerned her in the
slightest. No, River felt every wound Cascade had, and yet, despite yearning to
heal every single injury, menial or not, that Cascade had, nothing about that
had her as concerned as her eyes. Her black eye didn’t concern her either, no.
That was minute compared to what she saw in her eyes. She saw Cascade broken,
hopeless and ever so sad. The fact that Cascade cried like that was proof
enough that something was off.
But River refused to
acknowledge that, and only when the two sisters locked eyes with each other did
River realize that her sister was no longer what she knew growing up. And as
Cascade stood up, two of the four captors that dragged her there began walking
to her sister. River was stunned. She reached out to put her hand on Cascade’s
shoulder - to try and convince her to stop this.
Cascade flinched back.
She corrected herself immediately, of course. Pretending that it hadn’t
happened. Pretending that it was okay. But it had happened. Cascade had
flinched. Not from surprise, nor from anger of all the things that had happened
between the two siblings, but from fear. The simple notion of being touched
scared her.
“Cade?” River pleaded, a
single word that conveyed so much. It contained the mangled bond they shared,
and how it used to be as strong as steel. It brought back a thousand memories,
and yet none of them succeeded to bring back the person she knew.
“Sorry, Vir.” That broke
River into shock. She watched helplessly, almost as though it wasn’t actually her
watching, but rather someone else as her sister, eyes downcast, dragged
away. River was unable to move and unable to talk.
No…
No, no, no, no!
The phrase repeated in River’s head. Cascade had sacrificed her freedom… for
her? She had to save her! River had to save her sister.
“Hmm, that worked out far
better than we had hoped,” the first guard said. She had almost forgot they
were standing there. Almost. “All we had to do is capture the world
known ‘Jester’!” ...Were they calling her
a fool?
“I know! It was so easy.
Almost like she was begging to be caught.” River stayed silent, head
lowered. It had been easy to capture her. She put up a fight, of course, trying
to choke them by wrapping water around their throats and flooding it down their
lungs, but that would have worked for only one guard, two if she was lucky.
There were at least ten
guards. A little extra if you asked her. But that rose the question: how was
Cascade caught? Ten guards would be nothing to her. The ability to control
water like a bucket instead of a thread was what made Cascade able to control
her namesake and more! The only actual way Cascade could be caught
defenseless was in a desert, and Cascade would never go to a desert.
“Alright then. Let go of
her - she’ll be staying here,” the first guard said, one of the two that stayed
with her after Cascade left. The scene, as short as it was, had brought her
attention away from the fact that there were still two guards near her.
River snapped out of her
thought and rose her voice at that. “W-What?” She tried to back away from the
first guard before the one behind her gripped her arms hard. She yelped
in pain, along with slight surprise.
Guard one laughed
maliciously, “You truly thought we would let you go? Didn’t know that you were
so gullible!” River hadn’t thought so but…
“No, I’m afraid that you’re
staying here.” They laughed again before shoving her roughly into the dome and
closing the door.
She was trapped…
-Amita Ganeshkumar
"She was trapped…", I love how you ended the chapter with suspense. It makes me want to keep reading on to the next chapter to see what happens. I also liked your use of descriptive language to bring to the piece alive, so the reader can really know how the character felt. I think the best part was the beginning of the piece where the main character was in the prison, you wrote so much detail about just that, I was amazed that you could write that much detail about such a small thing. I also really liked your starter sentence. "She was a fool for believing in their tricks." I liked it because it was engaging and I was intrigued on what the story was about.
ReplyDeleteI love how you started your chapter and hooked the reader right on to the story with, "She was a fool for believing in their tricks." You started the story off with suspense and used a very engaging voice that kept me hooked on the story as I was reading it. By the time I got to the end, I really wanted to know what happens next.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed how you used descriptive language to help the reader clearly envision what was happening and how the character was feeling. An example of when you did this was when you wrote, "Now very well accustomed to the ever lying smell of rust (even though on the four steel walls and ceiling of glass, so blank it drove her mad had not a molecule of rust) and the silence so deafening that if she screamed that she felt that she wouldn’t hear it."
ReplyDeleteOne technique that you used throughout your story that made me engaged throughout the piece, was the figurative language you added. One line that showed this was,
ReplyDelete"It was strange, almost like how squares are rectangles, and yet rectangles are not squares. " By you referencing this using the technique of figurative language it made me have a better understanding of what you were trying to say.
I really enjoyed this story and the amazing use of details within it to create the setting. Details such as, "Now very well accustomed to the ever lying smell of rust (even though on the four steel walls and ceiling of glass, so blank it drove her mad had not a molecule of rust) and the silence so deafening that if she screamed that she felt that she wouldn’t hear it." This creates the setting almost perfectly and really helps me picture the prison and what a person might experience in it.
ReplyDeleteYour writing was so descriptive! You used lots of figurative language, specifically similes such as,"Something more powerful than all of them. More powerful than the person who can gain any power at any time, perhaps a variable, so to speak." Keep up the good work!
ReplyDelete"She was a fool for believing in their tricks."
ReplyDeleteI think the central idea is that you shouldn't trust everything a person tells you. The lesson based off the central idea is that you should think about something a person says before you just believe it right away. I can apply this to my own life because it can show me to be careful of what I believe.
I love your opening scene. It really captivates readers into your piece. I think you did that through sensory language. You made it very descriptive, bringing the scene alive. For example, "Now very well accustomed to the ever lying smell of rust (even though on the four steel walls and ceiling of glass, so blank it drove her mad had not a molecule of rust) and the silence so deafening that if she screamed that she felt that she wouldn’t hear it." Also, "It taunted her with the glass roof, so clear she didn’t even think there was glass at first, showing her exactly how close freedom was."
ReplyDeleteExcellent story Amita! Your introduction really, really captivated me and almost forced me to read on! Your use of body language and figurative language really helped me understand the lines, ''She grit her teeth in what would have seemed like anger, but River knew better. And the tears that she had held in for months, perhaps even years, fell down her cheeks like her namesake. It hurt, because they taunted the both of the sisters, water being so agonizingly close and yet, they both were unable to control it.'' I could feel what was happening in that scene, and your inclusion of those specific details were what really made me feel their emotions. Great job Amita!
ReplyDelete