Skip to content

Every Writer

Short Stories

Menu
  • Home
  • Reading
    • Blog
    • On Writing
    • Interviews
    • Famous Authors
    • Stories
    • Poetry
  • Writing
    • Writing Tips
    • Writing Inspiration
    • Playground
    • Writing Prompts
  • Publishing
    • Publishing Tips
    • Literary Magazines
    • Book Publishers
  • Promotions
    • Book Promotions
    • Promoting Tips
    • Classifieds
    • Newsletter
  • Submit
Menu

If I Can’t Keep the Star Sapphire Ring Then No One Can by Sharon Kurtzman

Posted on February 16, 2015 by Every Writer

waves

If I Can’t Keep the Star Sapphire Ring Then No One Can

by Sharon Kurtzman

And that’s why he would have called me, thief.

The Atlantic licked my toes as I stood on the beach, jar in hand. The jar contained a ring along with a photo of us.

Once a pinky ring on his sausage-thick finger, he had slipped it onto my pointer ages ago. “This means we’re betrothed,” he had said.

I had answered with a giggle much like a teenager wore a newly bestowed promise ring. I had always been mesmerized by the winking blue stone even though the jewelry was originally a gift he’d received from his wife. No reason for jealousy, the wife had been dead for fourteen years and he and I have been companions since my move to Boca Gardens. Eight years.

A mere six days ago, he was stolen from me by a heart attack as the two of us strolled the aisles at Costco, him losing his grip on a cart stocked with containers of fish sticks, orange soda and Moon pies—his favorites. I missed him so much that my body ached as if I’d come down with the flu.

And that’s why he would have called me, heartbroken.

His daughter had always been pleasant to me, but then there she was in his kitchen packing up his forks and spoons, word search books and bottles of unused tartar sauce. “Dora, do you know where my father kept his sapphire ring? I want it and it’s nowhere to be found.” The question dribbled like acid from her lips.

I handed her a few cans of orange soda and told her that he had lost it years ago. She cut a look my way, but I pretended not to see.

And that’s why he would have called me, liar.

Now, poised at surf’s edge, I deposited the jar on the crest of a thin frothy wave as warmth bloomed in my chest. Seagulls snickered overhead as the ocean swept the container out on an undulating vast blue blanket where it could float for eternity.

And that’s why he would have called me, soul mate.

###

Sharon Kurtzman’s work has appeared in print and online at All Things Girl, moonShine Review, Scruffy Dog Review, Airplane Reading, Still Crazy, Charlotte Writers Club Anthology, Better After 50, RiverLit, 1000 Words, the Raleigh News and Observer, the May 2013 edition of Chicken Soup for the Soul: Inspiration for Writers, Main Street Rag’s February 2014 anthology, Voices from the Porch, and is forthcoming in Crack the Spine. She has been a top fifty screenwriting finalist in HBO/Miramax’s Project Greenlight competition, a short story semi-finalist in the William Faulkner-Wisdom writing competition, a finalist in the North Carolina State University short fiction contest, and the Summer 2013 fiction scholarship recipient at the Wildacres Writing Workshop. A graduate of the Television, Radio and Film Writing program of the S.I. Newhouse School at Syracuse University, Kurtzman resides in North Carolina.

Related Posts:

  • soup1
    Soup by Michelle Reynolds
  • sky
    And God Help You by Paul Beckman
  • The Rusted Swing Set by Sheila Good
    The Rusted Swing Set by Sheila Good
  • Black Hole
    BLACK HOLE by Alex Khansa  
  • Creativity is intelligence having fun.
    You Complete Me by Adele Evershed
  • bearskin
    BEARSKIN by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm
  • The Mass of Shadows By ANATOLE FRANCE
    The Mass of Shadows By ANATOLE FRANCE
  • Betrayal-by-Mario-Sanchez-Nevado
    The Five Rules by Jason Visconti
Category: short story

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Call for Submissions

summer call for submissions

Open Submissions for fiction and poetry. See our submission guidelines.

Sign up and get free ebooks!

When you sign up you get 2 free horror ebooks and digital copies of our magazine for free!



Search

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Animal Stories
  • Anton Chekhov
  • Arthur Conan Doyle
  • Bram Stoker
  • Brothers Grimm
  • Charles Dickens
  • Children's Stories
  • Christian Short Story
  • Christmas Stories
  • Classic Authors
  • Classic Horror
  • Classic Short Story
  • Contemporary
  • Evans
  • EWR
  • Fairy Tales
  • Family Story
  • Fantasy Story
  • Father Story
  • Featured
  • flash fiction
  • Friends Story
  • Fyodor
  • Ghost Story
  • H.P. Lovecraft
  • HG Wells
  • Horror Contest 2013
  • Horror Contest 2014
  • Horror Contest 2016
  • Horror Stories
  • Horror Story Contest 2015
  • Horror Winner
  • Jack London
  • James Joyce Stories
  • Kate Chopin
  • Literary Short Story
  • Literary Story
  • Love Story
  • Mystery Story
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Nature Story
  • O. Henry
  • Poe, Edgar Allan
  • Psychological Stories
  • Pushkin, Alexsandr S.
  • Relationship Stories
  • Relationship Story
  • Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Rudyard Kipling
  • Saki
  • Scary Stories
  • Science Fiction Stories
  • Sea Stories
  • Short Short
  • Short Stories from Africa
  • short story
  • Short Story: Relationships
  • Stories about writing
  • Stories for Kids
  • Story of the World
  • Summer Stories
  • Thanksgiving Story
  • Thriller Story
  • War Stories
  • Women Authors

For Teachers and Writers

Looking for engaging writing prompts? Get 2,000 classroom-ready prompts that combine SEL with academic writing development! Perfect for grades 7-12, this comprehensive collection includes daily warm-ups, journal entries, and discussion starters. Stop searching, start teaching – download your complete writing solution today! Teaching writing just got easier. Buy the resource, support our site. 

Never Stop

Poetry

Buy Our Print Magazine


Buy the issue!

© 2025 Every Writer | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme
Go to mobile version