Limerick, Musing, Short Story, Theme Prompt

Fade Into Indigo

Written for Muse on Monday where David
asks us to write a story about a border, either in
space or time. Here’s where the prompt took me.

Image by Me & ChatGPT

The old woman stood at her kitchen window, watching December 31st fade into indigo. Behind her, the clock’s second hand swept forward …. sixty seconds that belonged to no particular year, she thought, just pure passage.

Her granddaughter called from the living room, counting down with the television. Ten, nine, eight…

She thought of all the midnights she’d crossed: the one when she kissed her husband for the first time, the one when she held her newborn daughter, the one when she buried her mother. Each December 31st, she’d believed the border mattered, that something fundamental shifted when the numbers changed.

Three, two, one.

Cheering erupted behind her but she saw only her reflection in the dark glass, continuous and unbroken, the same woman she’d been a moment ago, unchanged.

NAR©2025

This is “Changes IV” by Cat Stevens

All text and graphics are copyright for Nancy Richy and are not to be used without permission. NAR©2017-present.

18 thoughts on “Fade Into Indigo”

  1. Great, thoughtful story, Nancy. New Year’s always seems like a reset but really it’s no different than any other day, except in our perceptions. Life goes on. Have a great 2026! I hope it goes well for you.

    -David

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks for your gracious good wishes, David. This is another one of your prompts that greatly inspired me. I’m glad I was able to project the idea that New Year’s Day is really no different from many other day. Happy New Year to you as well.

      Like

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