Titanic: The Night that Changed Everything
Dylan pushed Sarah onto the travel boat and pushed the travel boat to get it away from the ship. Sarah started crying very loudly and hard. “Noooo!” she wailed. “Please, Dylan, No!”
Sebastian River High School's Literary Magazine
Dylan pushed Sarah onto the travel boat and pushed the travel boat to get it away from the ship. Sarah started crying very loudly and hard. “Noooo!” she wailed. “Please, Dylan, No!”
An hour later, the sun starts falling and nightfall starts to rise. A big and bright full moon fills the sky, followed by the bright stars. They go to the woods.
He was ecstatic. He saw that her powers were much more powerful than the others in the village, and he wanted to know more. He wanted to see her potential and know her limits. But mainly, he wanted to know how she could be an asset to him.
“A brick?” I squinted my eyes at the orange rectangle that had just made contact with a police officer’s wind shield. “A brick.” I restate, now sure of it. I heard more crashes from the left and from the right of me.
He had seen it. The monster. It was a man in all black with red, beaming eyes. He could not stop thinking about the man’s eyes that had focused on his own and then lasered up and down his body.
Ivan decided to lay down next to his mother’s grave. Hand still on the headstone, he stared at the night sky in silence. The freezing rain washed over him, hitting his skin, but he felt nothing. All he felt in this moment was that he was one with her.
The law was meant to abolish the underground trade of Kampo medicines, taxing them so they could control their business.
The rumbling started around 3 in the afternoon. Earthquakes always terrified me, but this was different, this was like a god was angry.
The new hire fell silent, mostly out of an ever-growing anxiousness that crawled up the back of his neck, making his hair stand on end. Something felt off about this place, this job, and he hadn’t even started yet.