Lost Nowhere: A journey of self-discovery in a fantasy world Read online




  Lost Nowhere

  Phoebe Garnsworthy

  Copyright © 2016 Phoebe Garnsworthy

  Kindle Edition

  All rights reserved.

  www.LostNowhere.com

  Illustration by Bird Black

  ISBN: 0-9954119-8-2

  ISBN-13: 978-0-9954119-8-2

  DEDICATION

  This book is for the ones who feel like they don’t belong

  in this world…

  and it’s for those who have endless questions about life,

  the universe, and why we are here.

  I have created a safe haven that you can escape to

  for awhile…

  Come, we have been waiting for you.

  CONTENTS

  Chaper One: THE OUROBOROS

  Chapter Two: JACQUES & THE LAND OF OTOR

  Chapter Three: CRYANTHE & THE UNDERWATER WORLD

  Chapter Four: KARISMA TEACHES TO TEDIMETA

  Chapter Five: THE DANCE OF NEO

  Chapter Six: THE MASTER VOLCANO

  Chapter Seven: JADE & THE LAND OF TEHAR

  Chapter Eight: A DAY WITH SILVA

  Chapter Nine: THE CRYSTAL CROWN

  Chapter Ten: VIOLETTA & THE LAND OF NEVEAH

  Chapter Eleven: THE CRYSTAL BALL FOUNTAIN

  Chapter Twelve: MIA VEOL

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  This book would not have been possible without the ongoing love and support from my family and friends. With special mention to – John, Jacqueline, Claire, Perdita, Tobias, Ruby, Madeleine, Emerald, Leo, Woody, Katie, Courtney and Yasmin.

  And to the stars shining brightly in the sky looking down on me, thank you to Jack, Isobel and Alice.

  You are forever in my heart.

  CHAPTER ONE

  THE OUROBOROS

  Lily was probably more scared than anything. Moving to a new house, going to a new school and having to meet new people. Change, she hated change. Why does anything have to change? she thought.

  “This will be your room,” Father said, as he pointed to the aged wooden door on the right.

  Lily looked down to the floor to avoid her father’s gaze. She distracted her mind by thinking about how little her feet looked against his. She used an imaginary ruler to measure the distance between the two, and then calculated the exact ratio by which her feet were smaller, predicting the rate they would need to grow in order to catch up to his size.

  “Lily…” Father interrupted her counting as he placed his hand on her shoulder lovingly, straightening up the collar of her sky-blue dress.

  “I don’t want to live here,” she sulked, pushing his hand off and continuing to stare at her favorite white sandals, now admiring the contrast of dark wooden floor beneath her feet.

  “Lily, we’ve been through this.” He lifted his hands up with open palms as though surrendering, lost, with no idea on how to handle her anymore. “The doctors advised…”

  “The doctors don’t know anything,” she snapped back, stomping her foot. “All they do is feed me pills and monitor how they affect me. That’s not helping!” She turned and walked away as though talking to herself, fiddling with the lace trimming of her dress. “They aren’t learning about me, about my thoughts and about my dreams…” Her mind wandered before she finished her sentence and she stood in the hallway, staring at the natural imperfections of the stained-timber wall.

  Father didn't move. He stood at the door, wanting to open it, wanting to show her how proud he was to buy the new house and give her a brand new start. She turned back around slowly, realizing he wasn’t following her, and she took long drawn out steps back to the bedroom door.

  “Why is everyone scared of what I see?” she asked and sighed, standing directly below his gaze. “Why don’t you listen? Why don’t you learn to love me just the same?”

  She shrugged her shoulders and looked back down, pressing the fabric of her skirt tightly between her fingers.

  “I do love you, Lily,” Father said as he cradled her chin in his warm cushioning hands.

  She nuzzled with sadness, with a hint of acceptance, and then pushed his hands away. You’re not listening to me! she screamed inside her mind. She could feel the heat within her body boiling with fury, her thoughts overflowing with madness, ready to explode. She wanted so badly to be heard. But there were no words left to say. There were too many questions unanswered, and she was exhausted at having the same argument over and over again. She had grown to believe that no one would ever understand her, not her father, not the doctors, not anyone.

  “Didn’t you like the garden outside?” Father pointed to the trees through the window behind them, as he tried to change the subject. Her mind flashed back in a photographic memory to the butterfly with pointy yellow wings and an orange zig-zag trim. It had landed on her arm and tickled her skin with its delicate toes. The gentle creature had fluttered its wings so peacefully, it had mesmerized Lily into a trance-like state. It had reminded her of her mother, and she felt as though she had been talking to her, while it softly kissed her skin to say hello.

  “I chose this place because of it,” Father said as he sensed her desire to come around. “And the teacher we met at your new school today, didn’t you like her? She seemed so lovely, no?”

  “I didn’t think that she liked me very much,” Lily replied stubbornly, staring back at her father with confidence in her assumption.

  Lily felt no connection with the school—not the teachers, nor the students. She knew it was going to be just like the last one where she had felt rejected and alone. Even the teachers would be fed up with her before she’d begun.

  “She did, darling. It’s just that some people show their love in other ways.”

  Lily listened to her father’s words resonate deeply. She noticed the way his mouth articulated slowly, and the pressure of his breath pushed out toward her, creating each individual sound as its own vibration of mismatching syllables. Father could tell she wasn’t really listening, but he continued just the same. “Your life will go on just as normal here. The only difference is that they will be giving you some more one-on-one time, to help you concentrate.”

  Lily felt suffocated at the notion of someone watching over her, and she wondered why she needed to be forced to concentrate on subjects that were of no interest. It wasn’t that she couldn’t focus on the assignment. It was just that she preferred to think about other things, like how many stars there are in the sky, and how far away the closest universe really is. Her fellow peers used to laugh when the teacher would point out that her mouth was open, deep in thought. She squirmed in remembrance.

  “And here you will make new friends,” Father continued, massaging the back of Lily’s neck lovingly.

  “But, Papa, I don’t even have old friends.” She lifted her foot and stomped it lightly on the ground, repeating it over and over again in an awkward stampede.

  “It’s all a part of growing up, Lily,” he said as he silenced her foot from moving, crouching down and holding it securely to the floor. “Sometimes we have to do things we don’t want to do.”

  He squeezed her ankle lightly and half smiled, signaling that he too didn’t want to do many things. But the idea of doing something against her own desires seemed to upset Lily more than she anticipated, and her thoughts began to pile back up, and this time they had a voice.

  “But why?” she screamed back at him. “I don’t want to grow up then! If growing up means living in a world that has been created for me, what’s the point? Why can’t I make it the way I want to?” She shook her head quickly. “But no, everyo
ne thinks I’m crazy.”

  She kicked her leg out, releasing his grip, and looking away.

  “I don’t think you’re crazy.” Father winked as he stood back up and took her hands in response. “You just need to find what it is that makes you happy. Maybe here you will meet some like-minded friends? Someone who you can share your ideas with?”

  He raised his eyebrows as though his idea was innovative. Lily pouted her bottom lip and pulled her hands away from her fathers’.

  “I doubt it,” she said, and pressed on the lace of her skirt once more. “I had no friends at my old school and I was used to it. I liked it in fact. Now everyone is going to stare at how weird I am, and I will have to relive this feeling of being so alone.”

  Her eyes drifted away from him as she remembered vividly the lack of interactions at her old school. Everyday she would sit in the far corner of the play yard, along the fence where the trees lined up. If her peers felt like it, they knew they could find her there. And that’s where they would torment her, teasing her for talking to the trees, and the animals; the bountiful gifts from nature that were her only friends.

  “Oh, don’t sulk like that Lily, you look like your mother.” Father sighed as he looked to the ceiling, and for a split moment, Lily felt like she could read his mind. He was asking her mother if he was making the right decision.

  “Papa, am I a lot like mama?” Lily asked, leaning her back against the wall.

  “An uncanny resemblance my darling,” he said and smiled with no teeth, but with love in his eyes, as he straightened one of her untamed curls between his fingers.

  “Papa why is it that I feel so alone?” Her voice quivered as she asked, and she turned away from him, pressing her forehead against the wall. “Sometimes my dreams are far more exciting than real life,” she confessed, feeling her eyes begin to itch. “And mama, well, she is always there. I don’t want her to leave me. The drugs are making her disappear…” Her voice softened as she spoke truthfully, as a teardrop landed on the floor. She rubbed it into the wood with her foot, imprinting the ground with her sorrow. She stopped herself from crying any further, unaware that the release would have probably been a good thing for her. But she had spent too many nights crying over a thought that exuded the same pain as though it were physical, and she didn’t want to keep hurting herself any longer.

  “Mama will always be with you darling, you just can’t always see her,” Father soothed as he stroked her hand inside of his, turning her around to face him. He paused, selecting his next words carefully. “You’re going to love this new house, Lily. There is so much to explore, and the neighborhood is full of teenagers your age. This is going to be a good change, I promise.” He spoke with enthusiasm and wiped the sweat from the corner of his forehead. But instead of thinking it was the heat that made him sweat, Lily read it as pity seeping from the pores of his skin. She wanted terribly not to be a burden on him, but she couldn’t stop the thoughts hammering away in her mind.

  “And what will happen tomorrow?” she asked, feeling her vision get blurry.

  She pulled on the soft part of her earlobe in an attempt to stop the tears from surfacing. But it was too late, the familiar emotion overwhelmed her thoughts, and she made no attempt to hide the tears. Slowly they burned along her cheek, falling down her face in one long, drawn-out breath, as though each freckle of skin melted with the reminder of just how far away she felt from acceptance.

  “Don’t worry about tomorrow, let’s just focus on today,” he said calmly, wiping the tears from her face with his tough-skinned thumbs. They scratched the edges of her chin, his rough hands, tarnished with embedded grooves, a sign of having worked hard every single day of his life.

  “But tell me,” she argued again. “Is a doctor going to come into our home? And stare at me? And monitor what I do?” She tapped her ear lightly, drowning the space in between her ear and her hand. And she slapped it repetitively, creating a soft quivering noise that purred in her head.

  “Lily, you know this is the new program we are trying. Don’t you want to get better?” He took hold of her hand to stop it from moving, and pressed on her knuckles individually, his way of distracting her need for wanting to stir.

  “Please try and give it a chance? Lily, will you? Please? For me?”

  Lily felt her stomach turn with a nauseous feeling that made it difficult for her to breathe. Her heart started to beat faster and she felt dizzy—it was another panic attack coming on. She fluttered her eyelids quickly, while her breath hissed between her teeth and she felt her whole body shake with the rejection of a choice having been made for her.

  “Papa, it’s not right, it’s not right,” she repeated, hurriedly, feeling herself fixate on the words uncontrollably. “It’s not right, Papa.”

  She pulled her hands from his grasp and tapped her fingertips repeatedly over her ears and along her neck while she looked away, knowing what was happening. She knew all too well her behavior didn’t help her situation. The doctors had convinced her father that moving her was the right thing for him to do, but she couldn’t help the need to scream and release all the built up anger inside. The idea of being watched like an animal under the nurses’ care while they tried to diagnose her, or misdiagnose, as she believed, was too much to bear.

  Father could sense the displacement in his daughter, and he held her in a tight embrace, inhaling deep breaths and encouraging her to do the same. She surrendered and listened with him as her body calmed itself as requested.

  “Everything will be okay,” he said, releasing his grip and staring intently at his daughter. His green eyes mirrored the same reflective features of her own, dark diamonds and drawn out ovals.

  The familiarity soothed her immediately, but his words of comfort were not enough. She needed to believe it. And from her own eyes she dove; through his pupil and right into his soul. Searching for the answers. She flew so far down that she almost got lost, as though she were swimming back inside of her own mind. And she floated there for awhile, safely in the dark. She loved him so much but had no idea how to show him. They were too similar, the pair of them, broken and alone, wanting love but not sure how to give it. She held his hands to reassure him, but in truth the reassurance was to herself. For when she looked back to his eyes his exterior had faded and she had easily forgotten whose heart she felt beating. She took a deep breath and composed herself, shaking the darkness from her mind as she decided to believe. She smiled with understanding, and nodded at their agreement. Then, she twisted the metal handle and opened up her new bedroom door.

  The warmth from the outside sun greeted Lily first as they entered the room. It radiated through a giant window in the far corner adjacent to where they were standing, and it lit up the entire space, every corner, every crease. Right up high into the ceilings the light shone fiercely like a gallivant display of affection. The ceiling was painted a perfect stark white, contrasting beautifully to the violet shades of walls all around. It feels very much like my room, Lily thought, but was too stubborn to say anything to her father, the idea of change still worrying her.

  Directly ahead, a large queen-size bed was already made up, complete with thick white fluffy pillows and a soft cream bedspread. The pillows were angled to face out the window, so that Lily could daydream amongst the stars, as her father knew that she loved to do.

  Such a big old house, Lily thought as she stared up at the huge ceiling. There was so much space. So much air and so much nothingness.

  She felt tiny. Insignificant. But definitely not alone. The walls had seen a lot, she thought. “This house is a hundred years old,” Father had informed her. It definitely had some stories to tell.

  “Papa, where did all this furniture come from?” she asked, jumping up on the squeaky bed.

  “It’s ours if we want it darling. You see the family who lived here before us don’t need it. Should we keep it? It’s antique and suits the house, don’t you think?” Father said as he touched the end of the framed
brass bed.

  It had three marble bulbs that decorated the base, and they twisted around when touched. Lily loved the idea of the furniture staying, and her mind immediately began to wander. She thought about who the person was that made the bed and how long it took them. When they made it, did they think about what would happen to it long after they had died? Did they know that a girl just like Lily would be lying on it? Thinking about them. The bed creaked lightly as though it were hearing her thoughts. She giggled to herself.

  “Yes I think the furniture likes being here,” Lily said as she leapt to the window, pulling lightly on the curtains that were stained with age. But they wouldn’t move, there was something caught between the hooks and the rod. Although the curtains were old, Lily didn’t want to rip them, and so she gracefully climbed up onto the side of the window to investigate further. Reaching high onto her tippy toes she tried to unhook the top corner of the curtain closest to the window.

  “Papa, I can see a piece of jewelry up here!” she shrieked excitedly as she pulled an object from the curtain and floated back down to meet her father.

  Using her skirt, she removed the dust on the charm, and held it up to him as they both examined her discovery. It was a serpent that formed a perfect circle, no bigger than the center of her hand. Covered in yellow gold it was embellished with dark indigo lines that etched deeply to form the scales in its skin. The serpent’s wide mouth wrapped around the base of its tail, and it was eating itself, strangely, yet pleasurably. The eyes had fine white crystal stones inside of them, and they stared outwards. The edges of the serpent weren’t perfectly kept, and Lily liked that. It added character she believed. She saw great beauty in the uniqueness of imperfections. Most of the time the pretty things she had collected were in fact broken objects that she showered with love, giving warmth to those who only ever felt the cold. She loved to seek beauty inside of everything that was within her reach.