Julienne was out on the top floor of the building hanging the bed laundries that she just finished washing.
It was Saturday. She’d been alone in the apartment since Rana left for work very early. She woke up past nine am earlier and just lazed around the entire morning. She watched at least two films--a romantic and an action movie.
By the time she finished watching the two films, it was already lunch. So, she closed the TV for a while and went to the kitchen to make shrimp pasta and toss salad for lunch. Then, she made lemonade for her drink.
She loves weekends. Especially, Saturdays like this. She can laze all day round and just do whatever she wants. Saturday is her solo day as she likes to call it herself as Rana is out in her shop all day while Sundays are for her and Rana. They decide whatever they want to do together on Sundays. The first day of the week. Before work resumes the next day.
She straightened the soft thick white blanket on the pole metal and bent over to get the yellow bed sheet.
Julienne works in the American Museum of Natural History at Central Park and she knows that Rana is not from their world. It’s a secret she loved to feign ignorance with.
Because the day she found her it was nothing but an ordinary day. Nothing so special except an ordinary regular family day with her mom and dad out in Central Park having their picnic in the early morning while watching the still waters of The Lake or forever admire the Belvedere Castle from a distance.
You watch the waters with someone riding on the boat along the way or the birds flying in the sky unless something out of the ordinary catches your attention like a dead human found with their head jutting by the banks or a dead fish maybe that has floated by. A dead man’s body was still yet to be found for no man in their right mind would likely throw a dead body to be seen one day floating on The Lake to open a case so as to catch a culprit.
Julienne was openly admiring the Belvedere Castle again from the distance while munching on her sandwiches. They missed a visit to the park last Saturday because both her mom and dad were busy with their work. She was on vacation from school so she just hung around with some of her friends last Saturday.
She was half-listening to her mom and dad chatting about his dad’s busy schedule in the hospital. He’s a cardiologist at Mount Sinai.
“Don’t you think you need a vacation, James? I barely feel your presence at home these days. We only see each other’s back every day this week.”
“At least we see each other’s backs saying goodbye and good night.”
“We hardly held a full conversation this week except see your back as you leave. You’re like a shadow in the house. Gone in the morning. Back by nightfall.”
“They still say ‘I love you, honey.’, ‘I miss you, honey.’ and ‘I’m back.’”
Julienne hid her smile but she felt her mom roll her eyes at her dad. She continued eating her sandwich.
“When’s your schedule going to change?”
“Next month.”
“Can’t you ask to change them this week? You appear too tired when you got home last night.”
“I can try, Juliet. But I don’t hold the schedule at work.”
They changed their conversation and her dad opened about his latest case of a patient he needed to operate on.
Julienne was sipping her juice looking at the banks again when she noticed something glistening brightly against the banks. They shone like caramel. A bundle of caramel hair. Maybe they’re just a bundle of long caramel straws that fell by the lake. Accidents of things falling in the water and getting washed off to the banks are quite common.
What if it’s a dead horse out there that drowned? Thinking the question ridiculous still, Julienne rose from her seat.
A dead horse drowning in the waters? That would be the day. She thought.
“Julienne, where are you going?”
“Just by the bank, mom.”
She said not looking back.
Julienne has always been a curious person. But then she must have inherited it from her mom Juliet who lives with her curiosity by working inside the museum which is full of more than curious things but wonders.
She walked close to the bank and peered down.
It wasn’t a drowned horse whose tail has jutted out from the waters. It was an unconscious woman she found lying on her back by the banks. She appeared to be sleeping very peacefully.
Fear gripped her. Is she dead?
“Mom! Dad! There’s someone in here! Quick!”
Julienne shouted and she saw them rising from their spot and running towards her.
“What happened?" Her dad said studying the unconscious woman. "She’s a girl. Julienne, let’s pull her out of the water.”
“I hope she’s not yet dead.” Her mom said as they pulled her out of the water. She was dressed in an ancient Indian tribe suit which was wet, crumpled, and muddied. A closer look, it appeared to be a warrior’s suit covered with a soft gray cloak that is now spread with mud.
She must be an actress who was strolling out in the park enjoying a view of the lake last night thought Julienne when she had an attack. It must have happened last night. She surmised. The young woman seemed to be of the same age as her as she made a thorough inspection of her face. She had ivory skin and a slender body and her legs were long covered in moleskin boots. Her face was small and oval-shaped. Her lashes were long and her thin lips were blanched from the cold. Her wet long caramel hair covered almost half her face and Julienne moved to tuck it behind her ears.
Her dad checked the sleeping woman’s pulses and found it thready. He immediately called an ambulance from his hospital.
After fifteen minutes, the parademics came and put the woman on the stretcher and put her in the ambulance. They rode with the parademics back to the hospital and the young woman was seen immediately in the emergency.
Julienne and her mom waited by the waiting area and her dad emerged out after twenty minutes.
“She needs to be placed in the ICU. She has a thready pulse, a weak heart, and is deeply unconscious. Her brain and her heart need to be scanned.”
“I don’t think I will be home tonight.”
Seemed like her dad’s schedule got one more added to his plate.
Julienne started to drop more often in the hospital since they found the young woman by the lake. She felt it was her responsibility to check on her. And when after a week, they still found no sign of knowing who the young woman might be as there was no ID found on her dress, she kept visiting her. She watched her from the glass outside again.
Julienne is an ambivert. More like an antisocial extrovert. She liked to hang around people but she’s not particularly close to anyone. She’s happy being around people even when she doesn’t have any particular best friend. She has some close friends she loved to be around.
She wondered how it would be like to have a best friend as she looked at the young woman. As usual, she’s asleep. When would she wake up? Does she have a best friend?
Julienne’s eyes were fixed on her sleeping figure while different emotions surged inside her. She pitied her. No one visited her in a month. She was curious about her. Why was she wearing an ancient Indian tribe dress the day she found her? She should have been found now. It’s already been a month. She wanted to know her more. Become her friend once she wakes up.
Maybe she should tell her she’s her best friend to get her initial reaction when she wakes up. That would be fun. She likes to fool around people and they don’t necessarily hate her when she makes a joke at them. She’s an infrequent prankster at school.
The next day Julienne visited the young woman and she was already awake. And she got her reaction when she jested her claiming her best friend only to be bluntly refused by an amnesiac girl.
She decided to call her Rana after thinking for a while when the unnamed girl asked her to call her a name. They agreed together that she be called Rana Fielders.
What frankly surprised Julienne at meeting and knowing Rana was she was a woman of many surprises. She was so bad at directions it was hair pulling. And she could teleport.
Anyone who can do teleportation wouldn’t be from this world, right? She was yet to know of a human capable of it and in her entire life and she hasn’t met such kind just so yet.
Except until she met Rana.
Rana was so bad at directions that instead of being annoyed at her for long she couldn’t feel but be amazed at how someone like her could be so helpless as a child when it comes to knowing where to turn right or left. But to compensate for her direction problems she’s capable of teleportation.
She found out about Rana’s capacity to teleport the day she was about to be discharged. It was the day too she found out that Rana has directions issues because she didn’t find the nurse’s station and she lost herself when she was about to see Dr. Rosewood in his clinic. You only needed to turn left to go to the nurse’s station but she went right instead. And while she was told to go to Dr. Rosewood’s clinic she once again lost herself. Julienne just entered Rana’s room when she saw her disappear in the blink of an eye and found her standing on the green lawn of the hospital then back at her room.
Even her parents found it daunting at first. Julienne’s parents raised their brows at knowing that they could be residing with a literal UFO alien at their house but how could her parents even know the answers to where Rana came from when she didn’t know anything about herself. Whenever Julienne’s mom or dad tried to pry questions about Rana, Rana would give them a blank look at her face so they decided to leave it be.
Julienne just finished hanging the last cotton floral blanket when she felt Rana at her back.
“Did you just teleport here?” She asked turning around.
“Yes,” Rana answered standing with her arms on her side.
“You could have walked up here.”
“I’d been looking for you since earlier. I texted you, Jules.”
“Ooops. Sorry, Ran. Left my phone back in the room.”
“I have brought cakes.” Julienne's eyes glowed.
“Really? Let’s go down!”
And she ran and went behind her and looped her arms around Rana from the back. Then, an idea came to her. They're cakes waiting in the room.
“Rana?”
“Hmm…?”
“Just teleport us!”
The floor was bustling with work. Phones were ringing. Sounds of typing could be heard. People were moving in different directions. "Shane, come to my office for a minute. We need to talk," said the plump woman dressed in a formal black coat covering a white top and gray pants when she came over to Shane's station. She wore thin round gold-rimmed glasses with a gold chain hanging loose with its end secured to the glass support tucked in the ears of a golden hair pulled back in a twist knot. The woman crossed the floor and went inside her office. Shane finished typing the last sentence of his article and saved it. He rose from his chair and walked to the office. He opened the door and closed it. The woman was typing in front of her PC. She sat with a very straight posture. Her name is Laura Simmons, the editor-in-chief of Daily Newspost, their newspaper publication. She stopped when she saw him and looked at him through her glasses. "I like the last article you wrote about the pan
How will I get you out of there? Shane thought as he looked incredulous at the object with utmost intensity. When he lost that bracelet twenty years ago, he gave up the thought of returning to Lunara. But now that he's seen it, there might just be a chance. But he needs to know how to get it out first. He didn't know how to go back to his old home which was metaphorically speaking a billion light-years away. And when he found himself inside this strange place of New York City where he arrived twenty years ago the first thing that he kept looking for was that moon charm bracelet that had been secured to his wrist. It never lost itself while he was still at home back in Lunara despite playing all day long. It had a secure fit that prevented it from falling off his wrist. And now the only thing that reminded him of who he truly was--was securedly locked inside the glass-covered case displayed among the ancients of the world. He was chewing on his cheek as he looked at it with grim fer
She must be Enara. Shane thought in silence. His hands curled at his side. Its knuckles whitened. Shit. Julienne cursed inwardly. Did she just say amnesia? Julienne felt embarrassed revealing Rana's condition to Shane. He looked shocked she noticed. She observed him with fury and asked nicely. "Will you please forget I told you that Rana is an amnesiac?" "Why? It doesn't matter." He retorted. His voice was flat. He tried his best to contain his shock. "You're not supposed to know it," said Julienne with a large sigh escaping her lips. "You're a journalist remember? What if you write something about her on the paper? Amnesiac people are points of interest among sensational newspaper writers. It would deeply hurt Rana." Shane looked back at Julienne's cross expression and gently patted her shoulders. "Don't worry. I don't divulge secrets, Julienne. I'm a news journalist not a gossipmonger nor a tabloid writer," he said with emphasis. She still looked at him with distrustful eyes.
Shane brought Katarina to the 150th-anniversary celebration of the American National Museum. The pop artist was singing her latest hit while they were seated at the back. Other guests and special guests of the night occupied tables before them. Katarina was dressed in a cherry red dress and her hair was twisted in a knot behind her head. While Shane was dressed in his black tux beside his fiancée who looked fabulous and ravishing in her hot red dress, his sight was already caught stolen by another woman dressed in a bright sky blue dress whose hair was also put up. He could only see the slender nape of her head. The woman turned her head revealing her oval face with curly caramel strands to see Shane looking at her. Rana gave him a small smile upon seeing him and turned back her attention to the stage. After another song, the pop artist was replaced by a band led by a male and female singer who played the music, and the dance floor was opened by Mayor Blasé and his wife. All the othe
Rana was asleep. It was past midnight on her digital alarm clock. Her head was lying comfortably on the pillow while her back was flat on the bed with the blanket covering her entire body. She stirred a little but was still deeply soundly asleep.She was walking along an empty road. But it wasn't so dark; she felt the light cast by the moon above. She could feel the chill in the air. Reflexively, she checked her black leather vintage wristwatch. It was midnight.Where could she be? She looked everywhere around her.The place was unfamiliar to her eyes. A thin fog has descended the road and everything around her. She felt the cold breeze as a slow wind blew past her. She was dressed in her current day working clothes--a yellow top and a pair of black jeans and her favorite brown boots but her sleeves were short. She felt goosebumps on her skin when the chilly air touched her skin. She blew a breath and saw smoke coming out of her mouth.She averted her gaze to the side and saw trees tha
Rana stirred in her sleep. Then, she opened her eyes.She saw semi-darkness. Her room was dark but a shower of light was cast from the windows. She turned her head toward the window.Through the thin laced curtain, she could trace the roundness of the moon. She hasn't locked the window earlier. It was tilted open letting the gentle breeze of the wind enter her room. She felt the wind cool on her face.Who are they? Those people up in the sky? She thought to herself as she lay still on the bed.She feels like she knew them but she doesn't know their names.Wait. How could she feel she knew them? She'd never seen them before. She shook her head at the sudden weirdness of her thought streaming then.Rana rose from the bed and went by the window while she kept her eyes fixed at the moon outside. It was illuminating with its round white light. It felt unusually bright and white tonight, she surmised.She stood by the window, one hand holdi
He was standing before the moon. Then he was entering it. He was forced by its light energy. He was being sucked by its unknown force. He tried to resist it but felt that he couldn't move any further. He tried to mask his fear. He turned around to see Enara looking at her with horror in her eyes. "Enos." She said in a frightened voice. "Enara." He smiled at her with his typical mischievous smile. "Don't go." She said with quivering lips, eyes widened with fear. Her caramel hair was slightly blown by the wind. He felt the strong force sucking him closer until he passed through it. "Enos!!!!" He could barely hear the shrieking sobs of Enara calling after his name. It was blocked and unamplified by the barrier that felt like water. "Enos!!! Don't go!!!!! Enos!!!" He heard Enara's cries calling him. He felt himself in the sky and saw clouds around him then saw below glittering lights and dots
They heard a movement from the shadows and veered their sights towards it."Anyone there?" Rana asked.Julienne came from hiding behind the darkness of the trees wearing a very big teasing smile on her face."Wow! Lovers under the moon sky. I couldn't be more wrong timing than ever, Ran."She said joining the two who were standing close to each other by the banks of the lake. The bright moon was a witness to them while it reflected its own against the silent waters of the lake. Cicadas could be heard with their gritting sounds sometimes joined by croaks of frogs somewhere."We're not lovers, Jules.""Don't be shy about it, Rana.""I'm not Mother Julienne," said Rana trying to muster her nun-like voice when caught in an awkward situation."But you are of age, my child."Julienne played along with her making her voice deeper and sounding stricter."It's not a crime to fall in love, Rana. Better to admit it than deny
“Ethos, you’re a terrible meanie,” Rana whined like a child as she held on his arms. “How come you baked the pie without me?”“Oh, be quiet, Enara. You’re too loud,” said Ethos as they walked to the side porch of their house.Rana followed him and Ethiara to the seat. Shane a forgotten existence behind them.“But I said I’m helping you out to make them.”She said as they settled down on the seat.“This isn’t for the Harvest Festival, woman.”He said looking at her.“Still…” Rana said pouting.Ethiara gave her a saucer and a fork while Ethos helped himself first.“Ethiara, would you please shut your sister up?” he asked turning to her. “She is so noisy.”“Why don’t you silence her?” she asked back as she filled her plate with the peach pie.“That’s why I
Rana and Ethos started eating. Rana happily chewed on the meat as she savored every bite.“I miss this place, Ethos,” she said with nostalgia. “I’m so glad we dropped by here after we went to Karitt. I didn’t realize I’m already starving.”She picked more meat and noticed Shane’s plate was still left untouched.“Shane, are you okay?” Rana asked before she energetically chewed more meat and picked some more from the grill to her plate. “Are you not hungry? We’re already past lunch.”Shane looked up at her. The golden orbs behind his glasses looked at her passively. Rana was oblivious to anything but the meats that were being grilled at the center of their table.“You’re not eating at all. If you’re not taking any meat, I’m getting them all,” she said with a naughty smile on her mouth.“No, don’t hug them all to yourself, Ran
Rana looked at Ethos then immediately shifted her sight questioning Shane with her eyes.Shane rose from his seat instead and turned to look at Amara.“Aunt, we’re leaving now, as Rana is already here. We’re going to help her find furniture makers for her store,” he said talking to her mom.“Alright, then,” said Amara rising from her seat, too.Ethos also stood up and they were all sent to the doorway by Amara.“Take care in the way, kids.”“Will do, mom.”Rana said and they went out of the gate of her house.The trio started walking.“Where do we go first?” she asked.“My friend Leo lives in the next neighborhood. We can see him first,” Ethos suggested.He led them the way to Leo’s house. It was close to the sea and they had to walk up a sloped road and curve a street before they can reach his
"Rana, why are you once again receiving flowers from Ethos?” Ethiara asked as she came from the hallway holding a bouquet of fresh flowers in her hands. She just met a flower delivery guy on her way out for work walking by the gate when she was stopped by the guy. It’s the third day Rana had been receiving flower deliveries from Ethos. Anisa was the one who received them in the first two days but unfortunately this morning it was Ethiara who had to face the delivery guy. She stretched her hands giving it to Rana who had just come down from her room to take her breakfast. Rana took it from her and found the nearest vase in their living area and took it with her in the kitchen to put water in it. Ethiara followed her in the kitchen and watched her in the sink. “Is he courting you again?” Ethiara asked with a raised brow. Rana continued what she was doing and replied to her. “I don’t know. Maybe.” She said with a noncommittal repl
Rana and Shane stared at the spot Ethos left after he went out of the room without saying another word. A tense silence hung around the room after he left. Rana moved and took a glass of green tea. “I don’t believe that guy,” said Ethiara as she picked a biscuit and put it in her mouth. “He doesn’t even have the gall to congratulate you but rather opposed to your upcoming wedding. What an insolent man.” She shot a look at Rana but shifted her gaze to Shane. “Do you have the date set already?” Rana looked quizzically at Shane. Shane turned his gaze back at Ethiara and shook his head. “We don’t have a date yet,” he informed her. Helios took a drink before speaking. He put the glass on the table. “When do you plan to hold the wedding?” “We haven’t talked about it yet,” Rana said as she held the glass in her hands. “We can hold it in a month,” Shane suggested as he bit into a biscuit. Rana looked at hi
Rana and Shane were standing before the wildflowers of the desert looking ahead of them in the wide flower field where they used to spend so much time together playing when they were still children. Rana had a straw hat on her head while wearing a comfortable floral dress and a pair of cream sandals. Shane wore a moss green shirt, a pair of khaki pants, and a pair of slippers.“Feels like a lifetime since we’ve been here,” Rana said as she admired the blossoms of wildflowers that span as far as her sight could reach.The wind around them blew gaily. The ground smelled of wildflowers.Shane expelled a soft sigh from his lips as he looked at the scenic view before them. The mountains could be traced from the horizon.“Yeah, you’re right, Enara. It’s been so long ago. I now wonder what it feels like to be a kid again.”Rana laughed at his statement. Her cheeks were turning pink as she laughed with mirth.
The next day came with looming anticipation. It wasn’t precisely a bright day like the weather was empathic of the day to come and what was about to happen. It was partially gray in the skies. The blue sky was covered with the glum white clouds. There was no sun at sight. Rana was dressed in white robes as she walked to the high ground where she would be executed. Her arms were bound by tight ropes behind her. Two guards walked beside her as she was brought to the ground. She looked at the tall blade that hung above her. Rana felt surprisingly calm as her head was raised above. She looked everywhere around her. The townspeople were gathered at a far distance to watch her. The jury and the Elders of the Council were gathered at a closer distance. The Elders sat atop a raised stadium. At least ten guards watched the post where she would be executed. She looked down at the ground below her. The ground was roc
“Why must Enara be punished for my crimes?” Shane asked angrily. His fists were clenched. One of them was on the table, the other on his side.“It’s not your fault that you were lost in the portal when you were eight years old,” Rana said trying to assuage Shane’s anger. She sat opposite him inside the wide living room. Her eyes were looking outside at the bright beam of the sun in their green-trimmed yard.“You’re not a criminal, Enos. You were a kid when that accident happened. It wasn’t your fault.” Rana said looking back at him.“But you are to die here because you tried your best to search for me and you even lost your memory because of it,” Shane said with tensed jaws. “In the end, you must die because of it?”He asked feeling incredulous and murderous at the verdict of Enara’s fugitive action ten years ago.“You don’t have to die for m
Rana stared at Helios for a full minute before she collected herself. She removed her hands from Shane. “That doesn’t surprise me,” she said trying to sound calm. “Maybe a bit. But I haven’t really expected it.” Rana looked again at Helios and asked him. “When’s the trial?” “It’s scheduled next month,” he answered directly. “It’d be the fifteenth.” Rana expelled a deep breath. “Guess, I have to pay the consequences of my thoughtlessness,” she muttered to herself and looked down at her blankets. “I’ll be there with you, Rana.” Shane automatically said trying to hold her hands again. Rana clasped her hands and looked at him and gave him a smile. “Thanks, Shane. I really appreciate that.” “Don’t worry, Enara,” said Helios putting a smile on his face to ease up the situation. “We’ll all be with you. We’ll do our best to help you out.” Rana mustered another smile on her face as she loo