Kira Morningstar
Bio
I paint with words.
Stories (3/0)
Starshine Aegis Rising
A pit opened up in Jessie’s stomach. She had dreamed of this day coming for so long now. Most of those dreams were nightmares, but the difference was becoming harder and harder to determine for her. The dread she felt stepping out of her dad’s car began to multiply as she looked across the school courtyard. Not a single face was familiar, which was to be expected for a transfer student. But Jessie wasn’t just a transfer student. She knew that if anyone here found out about her past, she’d have to switch schools again just to avoid the vitriol and abuse. She had to keep a low profile. She effectively had to become a ghost to her peers. That would be hard, with her shaggy dark brown hair and her piercings on her eyebrow and nose. Infringing on the dress code probably wasn’t the best of ideas, but Jessie had wanted to make a statement, and this was it.
By Kira Morningstarabout a year ago in Fiction
Cube
The outside world was unknown to her, but she could see a glimpse of it through the window in his room. Amir's room had the only view of the ocean, the only blue anyone in the cube was privledged enough to see. All of her life, Yves was only familiar with the sanitized monotony of the cube. It seemed never ending, with large white tiles and cylindircal fluorescent lights acting as her sky. Her room was a seventy-five square foot cubby hole in Side A of the cube, next to her neighbors and co-workers Miranda and Oscar.
By Kira Morningstarabout a year ago in Fiction
Neon City Diaries
I had no clue where I was after the first pill. It was a small, little green thing. No, violet. Or maybe it was pink? Point being, I was no longer available after the high began to take me. The tingling of the hairs on my arms and the buzzing in my ears kept me cognizant while the music and drinking was drowned out around me. I saw stars dancing across the ceiling and neon colors flashing in and out. Was I laced? I didn’t care. All that mattered was the high.
By Kira Morningstar2 years ago in Fiction