The Lost Island

Chatterbox: Inkwell

The Lost Island

The Lost Island

 

 

The man was wearing a black jacket; a size or two too big. The wrinkles of fabric along the back of rectangular body were easy to see, but the rest of him came together in patches and blips, like the pixelated screen of a faulty c-com. His face was all blurry, except for a traingular, pointed nose. He was wearing fingerless gloves in an odd color. Green, maybe. His hands were doing something, but it was too difficult to make out. There must have been something there. Anything at all. Some loud thought pulsing in his mind; some displacement around him that would garuntee a location. Some connection...it was getting closer, closer now. It had a sound, a shape. A letter? No, a word, a—

 

"Kennedy? We found the—" 

"Shhhh," the sudden interuption was cut off by another voice, but it was too late. The word was gone.

Kennedy banged his fist on his desk. The handmade wooden carvings of circles, squares, traingles, rhobmuses, and countless other geometrical shapes that lined his desk jumped. 

"Is five minutes of silence really that hard? Does every second of every day have to be filled with so much noise? I think that the world would be a better place if NO ONE talked at all!" He swatted a rectangle off of the table, which hit the floor near the doorway where his two friends were standing.

"For the record. It's been twenty minutes," piped up Laura.

"And you were just sitting there at your desk. You didn't look very busy," chimed in Justin.

"For the record," Kennedy retorted, "I was VERY busy. Where's Nadia?"

"I'm here! I'm here." Nadia Erdilaya's low, soothing voice dominated the room as she slipped into Kennedy's "office." Her petit form made her the shortest of the group, but she was the only one everyone listened to. Laura and Justin jokingly called her "Mom" behind her back. Nadia only dressed in one color at a time, and today, it was pale pink. There were pink lotuses flowering across her pants, and a matching headband tied back her short, dark hair. 

"I'm sorry, I tried to stop them," she continued her fingers straying up to her head to adjust a short, wide ringlet, "but they just wanted to tell you they found the man who was stealing from the dockworker's district." 

"Yeah, he was exactly where you said he would be. How did you even know about—"

Kennedy cut Justin off.

"That's not important. What's important is absolute silence. Why don't you two go home and we can meet again tomorrow?" He looked at Nadia, who easily took over. 

"That's a good idea. Laura, are you okay sailing home alone? It's getting dark. Maybe Justin could go with you."

"No way! I'm good to go," Laura replied, shaking her chin-length hair out of her face to reveal two bandaids crossed over her chin.

"If we got into trouble, I'd probably be more help than Justin. No offence," she said, giving a sideways smirk to her friend.

"None taken," Justin replied. But he rolled his eyes nevertheless as walked out of the room and tramped down the creaking stairs of the rickety house. Nadia softly closed the door behind them. Kennedy sat back heavily in his chair, playing with the edge of his white button-up shirt.

"I was so close this time," he sighed.

"To what, the island?" Nadia asked.

"A clue," he clarified, "something about the island, something about where to find it. It was some sort of—" he gasped and clenched his fist to the bridge of his nose, knuckles driving into the lines of pain around his eyebrows.

"I went too deep that time...but I was so close," he repeated.

"Kennedy, what if they're gone? What if the island really was destroyed?" Nadia had asked the question countless times. She asked it on the orphan's ship as days were filled with endless sea. She'd asked on dark nights while they moved from home to home, on the ferry boats, the long bus rides, or by windowsills in the moonlight. How many times had she asked in this very office, while staring at decrepid copies of the poems of Horace and the diagrams and shapes straight out of a Geometry text book that filled the room? 

Kennedy never answered. And as long as he didn't have an answer, Nadia promised to believe him until he did.

"Tell me about the island," she said suddenly.

"No. I can't."

"Don't tell me about that day," she replied, "just tell me something about your island. About the school. About the things you did there."

He was silent, and for a second Nadia wondered if she'd gone too far.

But then he spoke, slowly, without looking at her.

"We had a group...a club of sorts, my friends and I. A writer's club. We called ourselves The Chatterboxers."  

submitted by The Inscriptor
(October 10, 2019 - 2:41 pm)

Top

submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(March 15, 2020 - 4:06 pm)
John F. Q., thanks for reading this! And I have to go catch up on the Disorienting Express! I'm probably dead by now. 
Tuxedo Kitten and Nyx, thank y'all for your encouraging words!
And to the tireless topper, thank you too. 
I will do my best to leave everything on a cliffhanger this time, so I will absolutely have to write more asap, no matter what.
~
I have to do something. The thought settled in Laura’s mind as the boats of the Council Workers speeded anxiously past her towards the main Ghera’s main docks. Her fingers brushed against the C-com waiting at her side. One message, and she could notify the entire council of her whereabouts. But that wouldn’t be fast enough. There was no way they would reach the hidden cove before whoever they were chasing disappeared.
So it was up to her. She felt a Cheshire-Cat smile sneaking up on her from the crazy, slanting shadows. This was dangerous. She could get in trouble. Which, for some insane reason, made it all the more exciting. 
Carefully, she watched the shoreline for the little indentation that looked like a lopsided goat-hoof. The wind was starting to pick up now. Brisk, chilly fingers of adrenaline brushed against her cheeks. Then, squinting through the swaying light hung near her sail, she made out the lopsided hoof and carefully guided her boat, The Starchaser, into the hidden cove. 
The boat from earlier was there. She had been right, of course. 
No one was there to give her a pat on the back, so she gave herself one. She scanned the tiny clearing ahead,  as she drifted up next to the boat, but there was no one there. She planted both hands on the slippery edge of The Starchaser and vaulted over the side. As her feet landed on the bending, soggy boards of the dock, she heard a distinct crack. For a second, she hung wavering in the air, like she had been caught in a game of Ninja with her friends. But the wood beneath her didn't drop away. 
I’ll just do a bit more poking around, she decided, and then I’ll message the
Laura took a sharp breath that seemed to bite the insides of her cheeks. A familiar man stepped out from behind a tree. Even from a few feet away, she could make out his pointy nose, drooping cheeks, and nervous mouth that gave him the rather funny look of a goat. Only now, he didn’t look so funny. Now, he was carrying a gun. 
submitted by The Inscriptor
(March 23, 2020 - 8:06 am)

This is a great story, Inscriptor!  Keep it going.  I can’t wait to read what happens next.

submitted by Peregrine, age Many moons, USA
(March 28, 2020 - 5:55 pm)

You're welcome, and as to you latter comment, I'm sure if you have died upon the Disorienting Express you'd only be mostly dead, as unfortunately installments have been scarce. But as I said most likely that can be remedied soon.

I found this installment very interesting and particularly liked the comment about a smile being Cheshire-Catesk. Not to mention the intrigue of the goat faced man, as one is used to goats being more adorable than dangerous. Though doubtless appearances can be deceiving especially when the creature in questions is holding a fire arm. As to the earlier stave Nadia's retrieval of a mysterious package was artful. As in these times one rarely gets post much less mysterious post.

Strangely, I've once again been put in mind of Neverland since the name Starchaser makes be thing of Starcatchers; if you're familiar with the iteration of the classic tale called Peter And The Starcatchers? Though then again this may be my mind interconnecting things not necessarily connected.

As to my description, within this realm, one often finds me to be rather average. Aside that is from my neat pointed shoes, rarely polished, and the fedora that's always a slight balancing act when placed upon by curly black hair. As to attire, I always dress formally though not beyond the required collard shirts or long greyish felt overcoats and earthen pants.

As to personality I often frown when thinking or simply confused; tending to be rather steadfast when meeting the eyes of others. One likes to think I have an aura of mystery but it's most likely stage illusion in any situation. Often decisions of any sort become conflicted and take rather more thought than can be acted upon quickly and with resolution. While extroverted with companions, I am more introverted around strangers or acquaintances. As I rarely find enemies at the same rate as friends; I can rarely be too quick with earthier.

In closing, appologies for the lengthy post Admins it seems the ablity to be concise has escaped me.

submitted by John F.Q, age 17, The Island Of Britain
(April 11, 2020 - 2:51 pm)

Top please!  Inscriptor continue please.

submitted by Top
(April 3, 2020 - 5:26 pm)

Top please!

submitted by Top
(April 5, 2020 - 4:04 pm)

Top

submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(April 7, 2020 - 3:03 pm)

Top

submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(April 9, 2020 - 8:34 pm)

Top

submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(April 10, 2020 - 8:20 am)
submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(April 18, 2020 - 9:38 pm)

TOP!!!!

submitted by Top, age Top, Top
(May 2, 2020 - 12:18 pm)

TOP!!!!! TOP!!!!!

submitted by TOP, age TOP, TOP
(May 16, 2020 - 7:09 am)

TOP! TOP! TOP!

submitted by TOP, age TOP, TOP
(June 8, 2020 - 12:45 pm)

TOP!

submitted by TOP, age TOP, TOP
(July 3, 2020 - 4:01 pm)