Read Twelve Days of Stella Online
Authors: Tera Lynn Childs
The Twelve Days of Stella
Stella looked around the room that had been her home for
all eighteen years of her life and thought of everything she
would miss when she went away to college next Fall. The
white canopy bed with sheer pink drapes and orchid silk
bedding. The full-length mirror surrounded by twinkling
white fairy lights that made her feel like a princess every
time she checked her reflection--like she did now. The
mural she and her mom had started the winter before she turned ten. It was the one
thing she could not take with her and the one thing she would miss the most.
"You're being silly," Stella told her reflection. "Oxford is months away. Besides,"--she
smoothed an errant strand of honey-blonde hair--"you can always autoport home
whenever you want."
Her gaze shifted to the reflected view of the unfinished forest scene on her wall. A
happy composition of deep green pine trees, rainbow colored songbirds, smiling
woodland creatures, and the glow of tree faeries among the branches. That winter they
had spent hour after hour painting, while Daddy worked tirelessly on his new
curriculum for the Academy. Hours of laughing and sweating and painting each other
on the nose. The memories were that much sweeter because they were the last she
would ever have of her mother.
After the funeral Stella had never picked up a paintbrush again.
A knock at her door startled her out of her sad thoughts and she quickly wiped at the
tears stinging her eyes. How foolish she was being, crying over a past she could never
change. The Christmas season must be making her nostalgic.
"Um ... Stella?" her new stepsister Phoebe called out.
She sounded nervous. Never good.
"I have an itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny problem and I could use your help." She paused
before adding, "You might want to bring an umbrella."
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Stella took a deep breath. With Phoebe, the problems were never itsy-bitsy, teenyweeny. Shaking off her melancholy memories, she mentally formed a waterproof
hydrokinesis shield around her body and pulled open the door.
***
“Ow!”
Stella winced as something small, round and hard pelted her in the
head. And then another. And another. Before a fourth could sting
her scalp, she neofactured an umbrella and held it overhead.
She would not admit that she should have heeded Phoebe’s
warning.
“Phoebe,” she snapped above the roar of thousands of brightly
colored objects raining down on the living room, “what in the name
of Hera is happening?”
“I don’t know,” Phoebe shouted back. “I was just sitting on the couch, daydreaming
when these started falling from the sky.”
Phoebe was pressed against the near wall, holding Daddy’s oversized hardcover Atlas of
the Ancient World above her head. The little colorful objects bounced off the book,
springing into the center of the room. Stella held out her hand and captured a few. She
studied her handful, noting that the red, yellow, and green balls each had a little white
S printed on one side.
“Are these--” Stella squinted at her hand. “--candy?”
“Oh shoot!” Phoebe edged away from the wall to stand next to Stella. “They’re Skittles. I
was daydreaming about my favorite candy store, and how they have these beautiful
rainbow colored displays, and how they always remind me of the rainbow of fruit
flavors, and ...” She gestured at the raining candy, as if that should explain it all.
Stella had no idea what Phoebe was talking about. Of course, Stella frequently had no
idea what Phoebe was talking about. She chalked it up to the cultural differences
between girls raised in Greece and California.
But, intrigued by the daydream and the idea of a rainbow-filled candy store, Stella lifted
her hand to her mouth and popped the candy inside. Her tongue exploded in a burst of
flavor. She didn’t think she had ever eaten anything quite as overpoweringly sweet.
She loved it!
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“Stella?” Phoebe shouted.
“Right,” she said, pulling herself out of the candy-induced reverie. With one wave of
her hand, the downpour ceased, leaving them standing in three inches of Skittles.
***
Stella stirred up the blueberries from the bottom of her
yogurt while watching Phoebe shovel the Skittles into
garbage bags by the bowlful. Maybe she should give
Phoebe a hand, but she was having too much fun
watching her stepsister labor over the results of her
misfired powers.
“I don’t see why you won’t just zap them all away,”
Phoebe complained. “I know you can.”
“Of course I can,” Stella replied between spoonfuls of blueberry yogurt. “But you would
hardly learn your lesson if I make your problems disappear. You’re just lucky Daddy’s
not here to see the mess.”
She smiled with satisfaction at the look of horror on Phoebe’s face, even if it wasn’t
really justified. Although Daddy could be a bit of a stern disciplinarian, he had a soft
spot for Phoebe that made Stella’s ears itch. He never let her get away with half the stuff
Phoebe did. If Stella had been the one who visiomutated all the water in the house into
glitter, she would still be grounded. Just like they were still finding glitter in the
bathroom.
Hrmph. Stella would let Phoebe struggle a little longer with the manual Skittles removal
before reversing the results of her misfire.
“Hey, what’s this?” Phoebe asked from where she was digging rainbow candy from
beneath the sofa. “They feel like paintings.”
Stella froze.
She had forgotten about the paintings she’d hidden away so she wouldn’t have to face
the reminders of bittersweet memories. Paintings she hadn’t laid eyes on in years. And
now Phoebe was pulling them out into the light.
“Wow,” Phoebe said as she set the paintings onto the sofa and studied them. “They’re
beautiful. Who painted them?”
Stella set her half-eaten yogurt on the kitchen counter and went to stand next to Phoebe.
There were four canvases. The first three were goddess portraits, commissioned by
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Hera, Athena, and Artemis. The fourth was a portrait of a hematheos woman with looseflowing blonde hair, soft gray eyes, and a joyful smile.
“My mom painted those,” Stella answered, pointing at the goddess portraits. Then,
facing the painting she could never bring herself to destroy, she said, “And I painted
that one.”
“Stella ...”
Phoebe’s voice had taken on such a strange tone of awe and surprise that Stella couldn’t
help turning to meet her steady brown gaze.
“That’s amazing.” Phoebe shook her head, like she couldn’t quite fathom the situation.
“I didn’t know you painted.”
Stella looked back at the portrait she’d done, the portrait of her mother.
“I don’t.”
***
As Stella flicked her hand at the room, sending the sea of
Skittles back into oblivion—except for the jarful she
zapped onto her desk ... for later—she wished she’d just
cleaned up the mess in the first place. Then she wouldn’t
be facing Phoebe’s questioning look about the paintings.
But it wasn’t like she had to stay and answer those
questions.
“I’m going out for a while,” Stella said as she snatched the portraits off the sofa and
headed for her room. “Try not to bring any more plagues to the house before I get
back.”
She could practically hear Phoebe’s teeth grinding behind her. That almost made up for
her discovering the paintings.
Stella quickly slid the canvases under her bed. They should be safe from Phoebe’s
curiosity—and her powers—until Stella could decide what she wanted to do with them.
Now that they’d come out of hiding she couldn’t just put them back and forget.
When she heard Phoebe’s door slam—not an unusual occurrence—Stella stepped into
her silver ballet flats. Seconds later she was walking the path to the village, heading for
her favorite refuge: the pantheon temple. Perched on a cliff overlooking the gorgeous
Aegean below, the pantheon temple was built as a tribute to all the gods and goddesses
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of Olympic descent in an attempt to diffuse any arguments about preferred patron
deities and the like. Not that anything could prevent the gods from arguing.
The temple was rarely used anymore. The gods didn’t visit the island with any