Silent City- Anna Wu, sophomore

One chime marked dead midnight in the Silent City. Mara’s shift flapped loosely about her torso in the artificial wind that swept the deserted roof of the schoolhouse as she stared blankly into the distant horizon, contemplated the stars strewn across the inky sky like pearls from the severed necklace of an invisible deity, and waited for the Voice to speak again. It was now one minute after the midnight chime. 

Two. The otherworldly caterwauling of the breeze was punctuated with the rhythmic fall of impatient footsteps. Three. Ten. 

Half an hour passed like half the blink of an eye.

A monotonous drizzle began to plaster her hair against her cheeks. She should go back to the bunk-house. She should stop chasing ghosts, she thought. Or was that not a thought, but an echo of the chiding of a dozen acquaintances? 

Returning would mean capitulation, wouldn’t it? The words, louder unspoken, sent a rebellious tear down the outline of her jaw; it fell unnoticed into the puddles forming on the rooftop. Mara cupped her hands before her face and squinted through the fog at perfectly trimmed nails and calloused palms. No, it’s too far now to turn back.

She was still contemplating her hands in a sort of melancholy daze when the first illusion came.

ONE

Three flashes of gold. Bright hallway. Blinding light. Something long and white and undulating floating through space. In front? Behind? Inside? 

Can’t move. Half-defined, fibrous, wispy shapes emerge from the wall at the right. Is it a wall, or just a curtain? What lies behind it? One – one of the shapes – it has the face of a child. It looks familiar. No, that would be impossible. They are passersby crossing a road, who do not exist outside of that simple action, who are meaningless before the glory of the Voice I have yet to hear. What is the Voice? I call out – what is the Voice? Why must I wait for the Voice? When will it come, when will it rescue me? Where am I? Who am I? 

I  remember the name of the child, but it is not my own. I care not what they say; my Eternitia could not have fallen here. The child's lips move, and something appears gripped tightly in both of its minuscule hands. I fancy it is a paint-brush. Come back, I mouth back at her. Please do not forget. One color, one mark, one word to let me know. I know, I swear, I beg that this is not real, but I cannot remember why I must … 

“Madame! Madame! By the gods, what are you doing?”

The eyes of the pale young woman lying shrouded in a mess of wet clothes in the alleyway flew open, illuminated orange in the half-light of a new dawn. Slowly, her hands crawled to her throat and stayed there. “What? What am I doing?”

The other, who stood very stiffly in a tight brown uniform, frowned down at Mara without much concern. “If I had not been on patrol today, what would your daughter have done without you? You would have been dead meat. ”

“I would’ve. Thank you for your consideration.” Mara labored to her feet and hesitantly rubbed the side of her jaw. It did not hurt. “But you must keep your tongue in check, Madame. There are no dead things in this part of the city.”

“I understand,” said the watchwoman, turning to leave. “Thank you for reminding me.”

“My duty,” said Mara obligatorily. “How may I repay you?”

“There is a dangerous rumor hereabouts, that those who live there –” she indicated the familiar outline of the lodging-place on Yule Street “– plan to take you away tonight.”

“To where?”

“To wherever the Voice comes from. I don’t know. This is a most dangerous thing to speak of. I remind you not to follow them.”

“I see." Mara felt her heart-beat quicken. "Take care, Madame.”

“Madame.”

The characteristic ebullience of well-wishing visitors remained unaffected by the events of the previous night. Consequently, Mara slunk away from the noxious bevy of cards and condolences at the first opportunity. They would have to try harder, she thought, to make her recant. Why did they insist upon bothering her in her own home every week? She could no longer remember.

The house itself, on the other hand, comforted her. Mara proceeded down the main hallway and took the third right turn, humming contently to herself. Aside from the presence of a few new cobwebs, the three large blank canvases decorating the room still hung in their unspoiled, austere perfection – one on each wall, one for each year. There used to be a bed in the room, Mara recalled dimly, but it had been destroyed in some unfortunate accident. She pulled aside a cobweb absentmindedly, dusted off her hands, and stepped back to admire one of the paintings. There was a new cobweb where she had removed the old one. No, she had only cleaned the room yesterday. She stopped, one hand still held aloft. A cold shiver crawled up her spine. Was it her imagination, or were the webs enlarging?

Mara breathed deeply in, deeply out. It was time to leave. 

She began to back away from the crumbling wall, passing cleanly through the opposite one – which sprinkled her liberally with plywood dust and paint – and entering into the yard. The white fence-plastic under her feet was cold with morning dew and she shivered in her only shirt. Around her the yard was barred by several hedges of hastily uprooted, half-floating grass; her house, her only valuable possession, was collapsing before her eyes. She stared numbly at the stringy tent of webbing, imagining that it leered back at her. The paintings, she thought, imagining them turned to metal nails framed with torn canvas. My paintings.

A hot pricking at her right sole brought her back to the present. Mara moved her bare foot to the side and saw the sharp end of a small garden pebble prodding its way methodically through the plastic under her feet. She had no time to register that the pebble should have bled her or hurt her; instead, she turned her back on the building and ran.

Mara had no talent for sprinting. Yet when she vaulted fluidly like a deer over several neighbors' grass-coated fences and flew, filled with dread, down an alley-way, the familiar pains of physical exertion were far away. Instead, fiery coals burned in her eyes and in her heart; the pains of loss, confusion, and desperation had taken their place.

In the distance, beyond the sick twinkling of cracked lights and the abandoned streets of scabrous white paint decorated with shapeless lumps of grey concrete, an unfamiliar, colossal red wooden structure had risen over the ruined city. Mara ran mindlessly in its direction, even though – or perhaps because – it was the only object she did not recognize. Unattended shops flickered by with their windows turned into fabric awnings and their doors recomposed of stained glass, and rickety fruit-stands made of fruit meat touted the day’s best pick in construction woods. Understanding that her legs navigated of their own will, Mara half-closed her eyes and succumbed to the strange tranquility that ignorance afforded her. 

High-rises gave way to suburbs, and those to agricultural-purpose land outside the city’s borders. The red fence, towering thirty feet into the air, now ran parallel to Mara on her right. To both sides of the fence as far as the eye could see sprawled the lakes and forests of the city park; every so often a field, camp, or playground for children punctuated its verdant tedium, and Mara – to her immense surprise and relief – recognized in them the signature minimalistic architecture of the Silent City. She closed her eyes again and flew. There were no more inversions here where the Voice lived, and since time only appeared to pass in the City, she would certainly be able to watch Eternitia filling the only blank room in her house with color and gaiety. 

All was right with the world … 

TWO

Back in the hallway, its color red now, red and rotting-black, my own hands numb and invisible through the thick night fog. The greens and browns of a park smile from under a blanket of blood, and limp, small shapes, high in the air, lie impaled so still and forlorn upon the zeniths of barren trees and the handles of rusted playground-ramps. 

I call for Eternitia. She must not lose herself here. Must not, must not, do you see the drowned shapes rippling gently in these red rivers and lying lifeless and bloated where they are dry? Must not lose yourself here. This is not a safe place. 

A mauled face still watering crimson after its separation from its skull pouts down at me from a tree. Go back, it says, and the words rattle in its tongueless mouth. I halt, and my breath catches in my throat. This is not the Voice. No. No. I do not hear. I promise to gods I do not believe in that I will return if it stops.

Here there are only dead things, it says, quiet and young and sad. 

It says, go back to your clean fantasy-land with pretty stars and bells and refuse to awaken from the slumber you have forced upon yourself. It says, you will die in that room as I did, with those paintings intact - and you will die waiting. 

It smiles, and the limp shapes scattered in the park twitch all together like marionettes. 

You wish for me to speak to you. Here I am, now. Face me, Mother. Wake.

Mara awoke screaming.

The ground was moving, disappearing, dissolving under her, and the rivers receded into the distance and the treetops blew gently away in the wind like petals off a great emerald flower. That could not be right. She crawled to her feet, crying out, and chased after them, and felt the cold touch of an invisible wall before her outstretched hands. Adamantly she hit the wall, again, again, and bled and clenched her teeth together. Again, again, again, again. It was impossible. Time became meaningless. Her hands moved of their own accord, alternatively clawing and clasped in prayer. Desperately she tried to remember: where, exactly, had Eternitia gone missing? She remembered her face – cold, eyes shut, peaceful, abandoned, and so, so sorrowful. But she could not, could not remember – was it in the river she had sunk, or off the dilapidated ruins of the best structure Mara could have found she had fallen? No, neither, and she finally thought of the cold little bed that used to mark the clean room with the three blank canvases.

At once the illusion vaporized. Mara discovered herself returned to the room; she was standing beside the bed, which had never been burnt to ashes in an accident, and she looked out the window and saw the yard and house whole, and no perfect streets, no Voice calling for her, no red fence between the worlds of life and death. And all that remained of the three blank paintings in the room were three bloodstained clutters of torn white and jagged beige. 

Now, she registered, now they had finally been completed. 

She fell onto her knees and laid her face down on the bed, sobbing quietly. The sheets smelled stale and like faded memories, and the clamor and footsteps of visitors in the labyrinthic hallways coming to check on her grew louder with each passing second. But Mara knew one thing with perfect clarity: she would never return to her Silent City.

Zephyr- Coco Gon, junior

Zephyr (noun): A soft, gentle breeze.

He stood on the rooftop, quietly staring into the sky.

Vibrant reds, glowing yellows, and fiery oranges were blooming and bursting like spring flowers in the dark heavens above.

How many times has he stood on this rooftop, weeping tears that no one heard?

Festive cheers of adults and children alike were erupting down below, all praising the fireworks with a pure, innocent wonder.

Alone in the midst of joy, he felt a strange yet peaceful loneliness.

The world was so big, and he was so small; the parties were so crowded, and his rooftop was so forlorn. It seemed like the entire universe was enthusiastically celebrating the dawning of 2022, yet he was soundlessly keeping to himself.

A soft, gentle breeze brushed through his hair like the comforting hand of a mother.

Ah, he wasn't excluded from the new year. His sorrows, his worries, his endless nights of pain in solitude... This was a rebirth for him too, a new beginning that was just as worthy of joy.

And so, he stayed on the rooftop but joined the celebration. As the wind drifted through his hair again, he smiled a smile that no one saw. 

Storm and Sun- James Lopez, sophomore

The golden sun rose on a newly-born, cloudless day, its golden rays extending a helping hand to my crystal-clear window.  I woke up in heaven, I extended my arms in rejoice and to give them the relief of extension.  I got out of bed feeling satisfied and well-rested slowly while basking in the glorious heat of the sun.  It was as if I were receiving a long, warm, loving hug.

What clothes should I wear today, I thought.  Maybe my jeans, maybe my formal button-down shirt.  Or maybe, I just simply continue wearing my comfy t-shirt and cozy sweats.  I left my room and strolled down my hall to the living room, feeling as though I were wearing a blanket across my body instead of actual, controlling clothes.

I love summer.  I could not wait to experience it.  I ran outside shouting bye to my parents without waiting for a response.

I love my house, my loving mother, my father, my siblings, my friends, everyone.  I run out in the midsummer winds, the winds gently kissing my entire body.  I strolled the quiet streets of my humble suburban neighborhood.  I walked up and down the street waiting for my friends to appear from their house.

I rode my bike around each of our houses, embracing the now stronger wind.  The wind pushed my bike as if it wanted me to go somewhere.  At some point, I swear it felt like a hand pushing my body.  Myself, getting freaked out, dismounted my bike and set it down on the curve.  My friends still weren’t outside, which was odd as now it was nearly noon.  The sun was at its highest point in the blue dome surrounding us, which was now speckled with white blotches.

Has it already been that long, I thought.  How time passes.

At this point, I had the sense to knock on my friends’ doors.  I first knocked on my friend Henry’s door.

Nothing.  No response.  No door steps.  No groan of the parents shouting to get the door.

Then Michael’s

Nothing

Then finally Joshua’s

Nothing

That’s really odd, I thought.  I looked back at my bike, in the middle of the street, upright.  The street lights acted as a spotlight on it.  I felt hands on my back and my arms pushing me towards the bike, the same hands that I felt before.  They were icy cold like the wind, but they had the power and shape and precision of human hands.

The bike glistened, it was as if the bike compelled me to ride it.  The wind hands were still pushing me until I was right up against the bike.  Seeing no other option, I mounted my bike, and it sped off like a race car.

The acceleration at first was a shock to me, but eventually I got used to it. I initially saw the identical houses of the suburbs racing by, but they now blurred to a brown the color of dry soil.  I also now started to feel droplets of water against my body.  I looked at the sky, and it was a dark gray.

The speed of the bicycle increased, and I started to feel more and more sick.  I was cold, chilled to the bone.  I was not only cold in my body, but also freezing in my heart and head.  I wanted to jump off the bike, but I knew if I did, I would be seriously injured.  I felt so alone, so confused, and so concerned about what was going to happen to me that I could not take it anymore.  I screamed.  I screamed what was left of my heart out.  I screamed so loud that it seemed the clouds heard me and retaliated with a blinding flash of lightning right in front of me.

That was when I woke up, the roar of the thunder and the flash of lightning by my window disturbing me to the point of awakening.  I then heard the gentle tapping of the rain outside my window, looked around my safe, quiet room, relaxed, and then went back to sleep.

Heart and Sole- Desiree Lepore-Mendez

The hushed, vigorous taps of the rubber against the concrete sidewalk were overpowered by the music flowing into my ears, the same familiar tree dropping acorns to the flock of seven crows. I took a turn just before they fly away. The sun changes from day to day. Some days the sun glares down at me, others it meekly peeks out of the clouds, they go on in the same tussle for dominance and I have chosen not to take sides—although the sun has wronged me many times. The same red berry bush to my left, the woman’s tabby cat staring with hungry eyes at the lizard running past. Every time I go I change my route, in an attempt to find a new and unfamiliar path or a corner I haven’t noticed, a bird I’ve never seen, a flower I haven’t smelled.

As I run, I love to hear the music in my ears, pushing for me to run on, making my legs move rhythmically, sometimes dancing as I run—hoping no one was around to see the troublesome twirl. One hour of escape and of complete freedom. Although the annoying little beg for mercy from my calves would disagree, this one hour is always a highlight of my day. It is always the perfect solution.

Although to some people running may be their own personal hell on earth, running is a delicacy of time to me. The runner’s high that jumps a quarter of a mile in gives me the same adrenaline rush that I get when watching Get Out or when riding Ghost Rider at Knotts. The self-produced warmth against the cool wind nearly replicates the warm, gentle hugs from my mom after an emotional day. The satisfaction from the slow fading of the lactic acid buildup feels like the freedom and satisfaction of solving those 1000 piece jigsaw puzzles that I attempted so much when I was smaller. When I stop to drink water it just somehow feels 100 times crisper.

But it’s always after the run that gets to be the best part. I sit and stretch while I think about every step I just took. The beating of my heart slows and speeds up all at the same time as I realize that I’ve run faster than the time prior. The steam from the hot shower grows and grows like the thoughts in my head because it is here after the racing of my blood through my brain and mind that the thoughts truly shoot through each axon and dendrite in and alas ideas and plans and theories, and memories pop into my head all at the same time leading my train of thought back and forth.

Then these thoughts become memories, the ideas either become a reality or work in progress, these theories are put the test, these plans are set into motion. This system has always been what I’m missing. In my freshman and sophomore year, I tried to fill it with fake friends and with a facade of perfection but it only widened the gaping gorge that I tried so hard to conquer and then COVID struck, temporarily covering the hole with a thin sheet of beautiful veneer.

It was then that I discovered the joy that brought me full circle to my source of joy and inspiration today. I found the feeling of freedom and of elation in a time of imprisonment and darkness to fill this pit: the familiar vigorous, hushed taps of the rubber in my soles that was overpowered by the beautifully upbeat sound waves coursing through my eardrums.

Monochrome- Yohana Kim, sophomore

I slipped out of bed, wincing as my feet hit the cold dirt floor. The moon was absent tonight, and instead the ashy undercover of night obscured my vision as I dragged my bag out from under the floor and tiptoed out of my room.

I reached the front door. With a slight push, it opened. And just like that, I was outside, the drizzle of rain like ice to my bare face as stony clouds shifted and loomed overhead and flashes throbbed on either side of me. A clap of thunder shook the earth.

Reality had slapped me in the face—and indeed, my skin stung from the chilling cold. What in the world had compelled me to go outside in nothing but my nightclothes and a carpet bag… and plan to never come back?

For a moment my feet were glued to the ground, swirls of water pooling around my toes and mud flowing in both directions around me.

Then I remembered. And my feet began to carry me forward.

As soon as I stepped out from the thatch of my house, the temperature dropped like a stone. But I began to walk faster, away from the village, away from the people there, because I desperately needed to get away and I would do anything to escape. My ankles were caked with mud and shaking from the cold. I didn’t look back.

As I pressed forward, my consciousness blocked out the discomfort of the icy rain and retreated into my mind, back to a single string of monochrome pictures—a silent film—that had been playing on repeat since yesterday morning. Cycling over and over again. Over and over.

Over and over…

A small girl with matted hair and huge eyes, a circle of faceless officials, and a sea of villagers there just to watch the spectacle. When it was her turn, the girl writhed on the ground, her leg crumpled underneath her dress, crying out for someone to please help her get up, but instead the sage of the village demanded for her to be taken to the outskirts of the village and disposed of.

And what was I? I was a monster, just like all the others who wished to blend into the fog that obscured the village’s outlines, who couldn’t speak up even when the guilt in the air was tangible, who wouldn’t sacrifice their dignity when my crippled sister was deemed unfit to be part of the community and tossed out at Sorting time. Every year, the same story. And this time it was my sister’s turn to suffer.

Even as I blindly hurried through the trees, I knew my chances of escape were fifty percent at highest. The officials were aggressive, handpicked from the strongest in the village, trained like wild dogs to capture those who escaped. My lungs screamed for air and my arms burned with a thousand tiny scratches. I felt my legs giving out underneath me.

Suddenly, I broke through the border of trees and burst into full view of the rapidly lightening horizon, a beautiful canvas of glowing streaks of pale pink and lavender and orange… and a faint shape in the distance. In the second it took me to register that the shape was my sister, I had gauged the distance: less than thirty seconds’ time if I ran. I half-heard myself screaming her name and saw my legs running faster, working harder than they ever had in all my years living in this nightmare of a village.

Then I heard a noise—a noise I had been dreading and listening for ever since I left the hut. The noise of heavy footsteps behind me, crashing down on my ears like a bucket of pebbles, and men’s voices, and my name, over and over again, being yelled: “Linh!” With an awful shock, I plunged forward and slipped in the mud, but there was no time to pause. I needed to get to her before they did.

I dragged myself up and forward—bright red blood dotted my dress—the voices were getting louder—I was almost there—and then I was skidding to my knees next to a mass of dark hair and a ragged blue dress that covered my sister’s small, sad silhouette.

Her eyes were closed. Gently, I sat her up, lifted her chin, then took a hold of her shoulders and shook her softly. A strand of rain-drenched hair slipped across her face as she sagged backwards. And now I was really crying, because I could hear the shouts getting louder and my sister getting colder and slipping away just like the strand of hair lying across her cheek now. Just like all the other outcasts and rejects tossed across the border. Dead.

“Linh?”

I looked down and saw a pair of gold-flecked eyes staring up at me. In the next moment, I felt myself trying to scream but my heart had leapt into my throat and blocked my voice, and the tears fell faster than the rain pouring down around us, and I hugged her, and she hugged me back—and I realized I couldn't live without her.

She let go of me after a few seconds, and I heard her voice again, hoarse and cracked. “You need to go.”

“No, I won’t leave you this time—I brought food and clothing—we can escape this nightmare together—”

I saw her gazing over my shoulder, and I knew it before she whispered the last three words either of us would ever hear.

“It’s too late.”

And then the voices rained down on my head, and I caught one last glimpse of my sister before the wild dogs fell upon us.

First Year- Shahriyar Khaki, junior

I was sleepy, but at the same time too excited to see America that I didn’t want to even blink.  It was almost afternoon. My aunt got us a taxi to go to her house on 42nd Street and 2nd Avenue.  Throughout the whole time I was in that taxi, I pressed my face on the window so that I could see as much as I could of the buildings; I pressed so hard that my nose turned into a mini ball like a clown’s nose.  All I could see was never ending buildings which reached the sky.

After a 20 minute car ride we reached the house.  The second I stepped out of the car I could smell the beautiful flowers around me; it was like I was being greeted by the nature around me.  When we walked into the building the first thing I saw was a beautiful lobby full of paintings and flowers which made it look like we were  in a rich house from the 1980’s era .  I explored around the first floor like I was in the White House, during 2016,  where President Obama lived. As I was wandering around my aunt got a hold of me and told me, “ Alright shah! I know you are excited, but, for now let's go to our apartment and get some rest. We will go and explore the area later when we are rested.”  So I grabbed my two bags and went to the elevator which took us to the 20th floor. When we reached the 20th floor, exactly the second the elevator’s door opened, I felt like I knew this place.  It was like this was not the first time I have been in this building and this exact floor.  It was strange to me so I thought about it for a minute or two, but I got nothing out of it.  Therefore, I told my aunt about this strange feeling and as it turns out a Batman film scene was recorded in this house!  

I replied sharply, “Aha!!! No wonder I feel like I already know this place.”  At last, we went inside our home and got some well needed shut eye for the rest of the day.


Five weeks later


The school year started a week ago. I was a sixth grader starting in a new country, new house, new language, a new life. I was not aware of what was going on.  All I did was to make sure I stuck to my classmates so I wouldn't get lost.  I didn’t have many friends, or should I say I had no real friends.  However, there was this kid named JJ.  I took him as a bully, but all he was trying to do was to talk to me.  JJ sat next to me every day at lunch time.  We Used to talk about all sorts of things.  In other words, JJ would talk about all sorts of things and I would listen.  

For instance, one day JJ started going on and on about how I should teach him my home language; he said, “ Hey, Shahriyar, how do you say Hello in Farsi?”

 “Salom,” I said. And so it went on and on about what all types of words sounded like and how they were pronounced.  I was always tired of him talking so much.  I was so tired that I learned how to say, “Shut up.”  

So from then on, I used to tell him to shut up and all he said in reply was, “Nice! You are starting to learn English.”  This used to happen almost every day.



A while after


While I was in school I received a letter from my teacher; she told me to give it to my mom.  I was never sensitive about sharing anything and telling anything, that my school did, to my parents.  Afterschool, when I got home I gave my mom, Shahla, the letter. She didn’t open it and she left it on the table and said, “ I will look at it after lunch, now let’s go eat.” After lunch, I went on to play video games with my ipad.  While I did that, Shahla opened the letter and started to read it.  After she read the letter she called me and said, “Shahriyar come here, now!”  She was loud and sad.  When I got to her she told me that the school told her that I am failing all of my classes and that I can’t keep going like that.  I was shocked; I felt a coldness in my stomach; I couldn’t talk, I was speechless.


That evening everything changed.  My daily routine became much harder.  Everyday basically went like, wake up, go to school, come home, eat lunch, do homework for six hours, and sleep with still some more homework unfinished.  I did not have my ipad anymore, nor did I have any phone.  For what I knew, the only thing I cared about was my grade.  So all I had to deal with was endless hard work.


End of school year


It was the last week of school.  A lot has happened since that letter. To put it in a nutshell.  Not only that I caught up with my classmates but I managed to have the highest average grade.  I won an invitation to one of New York's famous museums for a science project I did. I also won a prize for a short film me and my small group of people from a film making camp made over thanksgiving.  I turned everything upside down in my life with only determination and hard work, a lesson which I learned and never forgot.

The Watermelon Theory (Abridged Version)- Andy Chen, sophomore

As most of you know, the Sun will eventually die and destroy all of us. Stars like the Sun shine by burning lighter elements such as hydrogen in a process known as nuclear fusion. And when the hydrogen supply in the Sun runs out, it will become a red giant and engulf many of the solar system planets, including Earth. There is no question that we will all die.

If the Sun will die from running out of hydrogen, a logical solution would be to provide it with additional hydrogen. There are many sources of hydrogen easily accessible on our planet, but one of the most efficient ones is water. We obviously can’t spray the Sun with a hose, as water puts out fire.  Instead, we will supply water in a much more indirect, but still relatively efficient, way. Allow me to introduce - the watermelon.

Watermelons have some of the highest water concentrations of any plant. They are also extremely round, making them an effective projectile to launch hundreds of millions of kilometers away. However, using watermelons does present a problem: how are we going to supply the mass of the Sun with a few fruits? The answer is simple: special relativity.

Instead of launching an impossibly large amount of melons, we can instead drastically increase the mass of a single watermelon. According to Albert Einstein’s theory of special relativity, a moving object will gain more mass the faster it travels, approaching infinity the closer you get to the speed of light. This also means that there is a certain velocity where the mass of the watermelon is just enough to support the Sun for enough time, yet not overwhelm it with mass and create a black hole. Through a bit of calculation, by accelerating a single watermelon to 99.99999999999999999861% the speed of light, it will be able to sustain the Sun for a year. Routinely doing this solves the problem.

For the full version and explanation, visit tinyurl.com/watermelontheory.

The King- Cielo Casta, junior

The king drifted through the ruins of a long dead kingdom wearing a cape of dead leaves and a crown of broken bones.  He does not know how long he has been there, the years had blended together a long time ago.  How old was he? Was he still alive? Still human?  He no longer knew. The king stopped looking at lakes and mirrors even before he lost track of time.

The people in the nearest town have learned not to come near his kingdom.  The king had cursed the kingdom grounds to devour any trespassers after all. At first, many people had attempted to enter his kingdom for a variety of reasons and at the end, all that was left of them was a new leaf on the king’s cape. The same thing would happen to animals, producing smaller leaves.  Every few years, a leaf would fall off his cape and the king didn’t know why for a long time.

~-~

These days, the king’s “cape” reached his shoulder blades at most.  It had been a long time since any humans had come by and the leaves of whatever animal had trespassed into his kingdom never lasted long.  The king had realized that the leaves only fall off once the rest of the natural life of whatever they represented ended.  He didn’t want to know what would happen once all of them had fallen.  

He was afraid.  

One day, he heard something crying.  While his memory of the past was hazy, the king could clearly remember the sound of a human crying and the urge to comfort them.  The source of the noise turned out to be a small child no more than eight sobbing right at the edge of his territory. “What are you crying for, child?” the king asked, his voice was hoarse from how little he used it.

Startled, the child looked up at him and started sobbing harder.  As if by instinct, the king reached out to try to wipe away the child’s tears.  This only succeeded in making the child flee into the forest and the king returned to his kingdom.  

Later, he would notice that the only one leaf stuck to what had been his cape was one that was not there that morning.

~-~

The next day, the kid came back shouting, “Hey, sir! I know you’re there!”

He didn’t know why but the idea of the kid coming back made the king excited in a way he hadn’t been in a long time.  Out of curiosity or because the kid was the first human he’d seen in so long, the king came to meet the child again, sitting right at the edge of his kingdom, unwilling to cross into foreign territory.  “If you ran away crying yesterday, why come back again?”

“I was only crying because the ground ate my goat!” the boy huffed then looked away.  “My goat and I were born on the same day and Mom says that if something bad happens to one of us, another bad thing will happen to the other too!”

“You did not answer my question.”

“I want my goat back.”

“Your goat is dead.  You cannot bring him back.”

The kid pouted.  “What are you anyway? Your hand turned into bones yesterday…”

“I am the king of this kingdom”

“That doesn’t explain why your hand became bones”  When the king didn’t answer, the kid huffed again. “It’s rude to ignore someone when they’re asking you something y’know.  Mom said so!”

“... I do not know the answer”

“Then at least tell me what happened to my goat!”

“It got subsumed by the ground”

“... What does ‘subsumed’ mean?”

“It means that your goat became part of the ground.”

“Why would the ground do that?”

“A curse. It is supposed to keep trespassers away from my kingdom.”

“But there’s nothing there for people to go to!”

The king was about to answer when a voice called out from the forest.  The child sighed, “I’m coming Mom!”  Before they left, they said to the king, “We aren’t done talking y’know! I’ll come back tomorrow!”

~-~

Sure enough, the kid did come back the next day and the day after that, and soon they fell into a routine.  Whenever the kid had free time, they would come to visit the king and the two of them would talk about whatever was on the kid’s mind.  The king learned that the kid worked on his family farm as a goat herder and that he wanted to move to one of the bigger cities and see the world.  The kid, in turn, learned very little about the king aside from the curse on the grounds and his cape of leaves.

“So if a living thing steps into your kingdom, you get another leaf and if you run out of leaves, you die?”

“Yes.”

“Since the only leaf you have is my goat’s, and I’m seven years old… that means that you have about eight years left!”

“If no other animal is foolish enough to come into my kingdom, then yes.”

~-~

The years passed and the only animals who came were insects and they didn’t provide much time.  As the years passed, the king knew he would die soon.  It had almost happened several times before the kid’s goat ran into his territory.  Both of them knew it was coming, but neither were ready for goodbye.  They had become as close as brothers or as a parent and their child.

When the day came, neither of them were ready.  The two of them were talking about the kid’s plans for when they were in a city when suddenly the king faded until all that was left were his crown and his bones.

“You left with a smile on your face,” the kid sighed. “Didn’t even finish listening to my plans.”  A gust of wind blew, turning the king’s bones into dust.  The kid picked up the crown reverently.  It was lighter than they thought it would be considering the king had always told them of how it was the representation of his people and how heavy it was to him.

The kid walked to the center of the kingdom and found what he assumed to have been the throne room. With the king’s death, the curse on the grounds had lifted, leaving the kid able to go where he needed to go.  After contemplating where they should put the crown, the kid decided to bury it.  The crown of the people should be with the people after all.  Their mom said so.