Read Twelve Days of Stella Online
Authors: Tera Lynn Childs
regularity, and the residents didn’t feel compelled to pay formal tribute. Which meant
that Stella usually found the temple deserted—the perfect environment for clear
thinking.
As she climbed the shallow steps and passed through the colonnade to enter the temple
proper, she felt a growing sense of calm and clarity. There was something about the
brightly colored mural the covered every square inch of the interior walls that just ...
made her smile. It portrayed all the gods and goddesses in their most resplendent glory.
Like a massive and ancient family portrait.
Stella went, as she always did, to stand before the goddess on the far wall. The one
wearing a beautiful golden crown, holding a plump pomegranate in her elegant hand,
and with a proud peacock lying across her feet. Hera.
It had been years since Stella met with her immortal ancestor. The great deities rarely
left Olympus anymore, and Stella hadn’t had time—or an invitation—to attend their
court. If she couldn’t speak to Hera face-to-face, then this was the next best thing.
She lifted a hand to run her fingertips over the gilded sandals on Hera’s feet, but
stopped when she heard footsteps echoing into the temple.
Startled, she turned to see who else still visited the temple, and was even more shocked
to see Phoebe’s friend, Troy, hurrying inside. He was carrying a cloth bag in his
outstretched hands, eyeing it nervously as if it might bite at any second.
***
“Travatas?” Stella asked, trying to determine what might be in the
bag. “What are you—“
“Aaaack!” he screamed, dropping the bag and then quickly
retrieving it when it started to wriggle away. The bag grasped
firmly in one hand, he glared at Stella. “You scared the crap out of
me! I didn’t think anyone visited the temple anymore.”
Stella arched a brow. “Neither did I.”
“Oh.” He gave her an apologetic look. “Sorry. I guess you were here
first.” Reversing course, he backed toward the door. “I’ll go. Let you finish your, uh—“
“No!” Stella blurted, then readjusted her composure. “I mean, you’re welcome to stay.
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The Twelve Days of Stella
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It’s a public place.”
Troy glanced at the bag. “Um, I think I should come back later.” The bag wriggled
again. He muttered, “Or maybe not at all.”
Now she was more curious than anything. What was in that bag?
“Don’t be ridiculous,” she insisted, crossing the temple until she stood in front of him at
the entrance. “You’re obviously here to,” —she gestured at the wriggling bag—“make
an offering of some sort. You should present it.”
Arms crossed over her chest, Stella stifled a laugh at the miserable look on Troy’s face.
He looked like she’d asked him to kiss a frog. But she wanted to know what was
wriggling inside that bag, so she adopted her most intimidating look—she had many—
and waited. She could sense him weighing his choices. Although she could read his
thoughts if she tried—a power she had inherited from her ancestor goddess—she
preferred watching and guessing. Made her feel ... more human.
Finally, his shoulders slumped.
“Okay,” he said. “If you’d wait outside, this’ll just take a second.”
Stella shook her head slowly. “No thank you. I won’t be in your way.” She stepped aside
and gestured into the temple. “Go ahead.”
To his credit, Troy didn’t waver. He clenched his jaw, gripped the bag tighter, and
stalked across the limestone floor. When he reached the section of the mural that
represented Asklepios, the god of medicine, he knelt down and pulled at the opening of
the bag.
Stella couldn’t contain her gasp when a small green snake slithered out.
***
Stella prided herself on her ability to remain calm in every
situation. Seeing that little green stripe of reptilian slime
appear out of the bag tested her control to the limit. Ballet
flats, she felt sure, were not a significant barrier against
snake bites.
“Is that thing dangerous?” she asked, pleased that her
voice remained steady.
“No way,” Troy replied. But he backed away quickly. “He’s grass snake.” The snake
hissed and Troy jumped back. “Completely,” —he swallowed hard—“harmless.”
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The Twelve Days of Stella
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The snake, perhaps finding the stone floor too cold, slithered back into the bag.
“What are you doing with it?” she asked. “Just leaving it here?”
“No, I’m” —Troy took a step toward the bag—“sending him to Olympus. To
Asklepios.”
Even though Troy couldn’t see her behind him, Stella nodded. The god of medicine was
quite fond of snakes, just as Hera was fond of peacocks. Sending a god or goddess a
favorite gift was a definite way to gain their favor. Since humans stopped worshipping
the gods as deities, they didn’t receive nearly enough offerings to sustain their egos.
Stella watched as Troy held out his hands toward the snake-filled bag, a look of intense
concentration on his face. His hands glowed. Then the bag disappeared, leaving the
snake on the cold floor. Troy twisted his wrists and the snake floated gently into the air,
toward the painting of Asklepios. For a moment the snake hovered before the serpentwrapped staff of the medicine god. Then the snake merged into the mural and was
gone.
Troy’s entire body sagged with relief.
“Why?” Stella asked.
He turned to face her, his cheeks flushed a deep pink she could see even in the faint
light of the temple. He shoved his hands in the pockets of his cargo shorts before
answering. “I’m ... asking a favor.”
A favor from the god of medicine?
“Is someone sick?” Stella didn’t know Troy well, but her stomach still turned at her next
thought. “Are you sick?”
Troy’s eyes widened. “No, no. Nothing like that.” He squeezed his eyes shut and shook
his head. “It’s stupid,” he explained. “I shouldn’t have even wasted my time. Or,” —he
nodded at the mural—“his.”
“I don’t think you would have gone to the effort of getting the snake if it was stupid.”
Stella didn’t know why she was wasting her time reassuring him, but it distracted her
from her own thoughts so she kept going. “What was the favor?”
Troy groaned and ran a hand over his hair.
“I come from a long line of doctors, you know. Since forever.” He rocked back on his
heels. “But I want to be a musician. I asked for permission to pursue my passion.”
“What if you don’t get it?”
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“I’ll pursue it anyway.” He gave Stella a helpless smile. “You can’t just ignore a
passion.”
***
Stella considered Troy’s statement. You can’t just ignore a
passion. He was willing to face his family’s—and his
ancestor god’s—disapproval to pursue the thing he loved
the most.
Her mom had felt that way about painting.
Stella wasn’t sure she had that kind of passion. For
anything.
“Or who knows,” Troy said with a laugh, interrupting her
thoughts. “I’ll probably chicken out and go to med school anyway.”
“No.” She shook her head slowly. “I don’t think you will.”
Not when he cared enough to bring a live snake to the pantheon temple.
He studied her for a moment, and she could practically feel his confusion. What was he
thinking? For a brief instant she was tempted to let herself into his thoughts, but she
steeled her resolve.
“I guess we’ll see,” he finally said.
They fell into a silence. Troy gazed up at the painting of his ancestor god, with a
miserable look on his face. Stella stared blankly at nothing in particular. Suddenly, more
than anything, she wanted to know what her passion was. She would be going off to
college in a few months, starting her adult life, and she had no idea what she wanted to
do.
“How did you know?” she asked.
Troy looked at her. “Know what?”
“That you wanted to be a musician,” she explained. She tugged nervously at the hem of
her shirt, then caught herself and pressed her hands against her thighs. “How did you
know you didn’t want to be a doctor?”
“I don’t know,” he answered, unhelpfully. “I guess I’ve just always known. I’ve always
turned to music as my escape when everything else seems impossible.”
Great. She couldn’t think of anything she viewed as an escape. Maybe she wasn’t
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The Twelve Days of Stella
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supposed to have a passion. If she was, wouldn’t she have found it by now? Shouldn’t
she at least have some clue by now?
“You heading home?” he asked, clearly oblivious to her deflating mood. “I’ll walk with
you and pop in on Phoebe.”
She nodded and they headed out of the temple. They didn’t speak. Normally Stella
would feel compelled to make small talk, to fill the awkward silence. But right now all
she could think of was finding her passion. It seemed like everyone but she had a
passion. Troy had his music. Phoebe had running. Daddy had the school. Her mom had
had painting.
What did Stella have?
***
“Troy!” Phoebe squealed as he and Stella walked through
the front door. Then she noticed Stella behind him and
frowned.
If Troy noticed her questioning look, Stella noted, he
ignored it and flopped onto the sofa next to her. “Hey
Phoebes.”
“Omigods,” Phoebe said, apparently forgetting her confusion. “You will never believe
what I accidentally did today.”
As she explained the incident to Troy, Stella glanced around the room, confirming that
there had been no Skittles recurrence in her absence. The thought reminded Stella of the
jar on her desk, and she held back a smile.
“I’ll be in my room,” she announced, although she was quite certain neither of them
would take notice if she autoported herself to New Guinea. Stella hated feeling like an
outsider. She suddenly wished Adara had not gone home for the winter holiday.
She would just have to console herself with Skittles.
Pulling the door shut behind her, Stella kicked off her ballet slippers, grabbed the jar of
candy, and sank into her crisp white armchair. As she sat there, popping Skittle after
Skittle (wondering whether a single candy would be called a Skittle or a Skittles) and
gazing at the quartet of portraits on her bed, a flash of light drew her attention to the
door.
When she went to inspect, she found a folded sheet of notebook paper on the floor.