The Red and the Blue is a creepy story for children about a glass-blowing shop that sells beautiful red and blue glassware. It is based on an urban legend told by Russian children in summer camps.
In a big city in Russia, there was a vacant shop. It was located on the main street, in an old two-story building. One day, the “Vacant” sign was taken down and a new store opened. It was a glass-blowing shop and dealt in all manner of intricate and artistic glass pieces.
They sold hand-blown wine glasses, vases, crystals. All of the pieces only came in two colors: Red and blue. But these colors were so exquisitely interwoven that they captured the eye and were a delight to behold. The red color ranged from an anxious, frightening color of burgundy to a gorgeous pink haze. The blue color rannged from the shimmering cobalt of the deep sea to the pale azure of the cloudless sky.
Naturally, the store had many customers for their unique glass creations and the word spread for miles around. People heard about the unusual designs and formed huge queues, just waiting to buy the beautiful red and blue products. Many even came from other cities to buy their glassware in this glass-blowing store. Everyone wanted to own one of the pieces, even though the cost was very expensive.
Meanwhile, in the same city and its suburbs, a series of strange murders were taking place. Young men and women between the ages of seventeen and thirty years old were dying at an alarming rate. There didn’t seem to be any pattern to the crimes. The corpses were found all over the city and none of the victims seemed to know each other.
All of the crimes apparently lack a motive. Police scratched their heads and struggled to understand why these people were killed. Their valuables were never stolen and the bodies were often found with money or jewelry still in their pockets. The police were puzzled. Why didn’t the murderer steal the victim’s belongings? The victims were always killed in the same way. They were either chopped up with an axe or sliced open with a knife.
Two detectives arrived from Moscow and were tasked with solving the crimes. They questioned and temporarily detained all of the usual suspects, criminals and mental patients, but they came up empty. They did not even come across the slightest clue that might solve the mystery. Still, the hacked and slashed corpses continued to turn up in alleys and back streets.
Then, the chief of police decided to gather a task force of over two hundred policemen. They were ordered to go undercover. They dressed in civilian clothes and placed themselves on duty throughout the city. The murders suddenly stopped. For weeks, there was not one corpse littering the city streets. The citizens began to think that the reign of fear had finally ended.
One of the policemen was about to go off duty, when he remembered that he had forgotten his wife’s birthday. He needed to buy her a present before he went home. He had heard about the famous glass-blowing shop and the unusual glassware it sold. His wife had often remarked on how beautiful these glass pieces were.
He asked his partner to wait for him while he went into the store and bought something nice for his wife. When he walked into the shop, he was greeted by a bored storekeeper who stood behind the counter and showed him what pieces of glass were on offer.
The policeman looked over the whole range and was surprised by how drab and uninteresting most of the pieces were. He had been expecting to see something of rare beauty, but all of the pieces seemed to be just ordinary clear glass. The storekeeper told him that they were awaiting a large shipment of the red and the blue glass, but it had been delayed.
The policeman looked around for a few minutes, but nothing caught his eye. He picked up one of pieces of ordinary glass and began to make fun of it, saying there was nothing special about it and he could easily make it himself.
The storekeeper smiled and listened to him politely, then motioned with his hand and beckoned the policeman closer.”
“The problem is that during the glass-blowing process, we were missing one important element,” he said quietly.
“Oh, and What was that?” asked the policeman.
“Your heart!” said the storekeeper as he snatched an axe from under the counter and stuck the policeman on the forehead.
However, the storekeeper forgot that policemen always go on duty in pairs. The policeman’s partner, who was waiting outside, heard a scream and burst through the shop door with his gun drawn. He found the storekeeper at the back of the shop, crouched over the dead body of the policeman. The storekeeper had two large syringes in his hands and was extracting blood from the policeman’s corpse.
Blood from a vein for the blue glass and blood from the heart for the red glass.
I AM AMERICAN!!!!!!
I never said im not!!
That last comment made me sound like a murder loving freak…
He he this story is funny!
Yeah, I’m pretty sure that deoxygenized blood isn’t blue. Just a darker shade of red. It just looks blue because if you’re white then your skin refracts the red color.
There is a widespread belief that the blood in your veins is blue. This isn’t true, it’s actually deep red. It just seems blue when you look at it through your skin. This story is inspired by a Russian urban legend that is based on that mistaken belief.
This is awesome
Who Is American here
How do they make blue glass? Anyway I knew what was happening to get red glass.
“Blood from a vein for the blue glass”
To thoroughly clarify, it means that red blood from one of your veins goes onto the blue glass, while red blood from your heart for the red glass.
Hence the red stripes/designs in each of the glass pieces. There is nothing in the body that is making the blue color, that’s not what it’s saying.
Blood is not blue. We have an iron compound in our blood, hence the color is red. If it was blue, we would have a copper compound. That’s why some spiders have blue blood.
Blood is darker if it has less oxygen. Brighter it is, the more oxygen it contains.
@PeanutBrittle
It says “Blood from the vein for blue glass”
-.-
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guys
the blue color isn’t anything from your body. Its just the blue color of the vase. Read the last line and it should answer your questions.
Um, okay, logic.
work your magic on blue blood.
@scaryrose, i was asking about the blue color, what it was made of, i know perfectly well that the red is blood.
DUH! :P
I think it just meant that blood from your veins was used on the blue colored vases while blood from your heart was used on red vases. It doesn’t necessarily mean that something blue came from your body and was used in the vase.
…Blood’s red.
No matter where it comes from in your body.
Human blood is red.
Doesn’t matter if it comes from your veins, arteries or anyway else…It’s still red.
Granted blood from your veins may be a tiny bit darker, but it’s still red.
I’m never going to buy a blue or red vase.
Blood from the vein is red isn’t it? I didn’t know we had blue blood :|
@soulserenade blood from the vein it sai so at the bottom on the last line
Awesome story! i wonder what the blue is made of…
it wasn’t that descriptive, or at least not to me. But that really would burn!
you where TOO descriptive
I know what would hurt if some sliced you open and wanted to pour something that stings.Achoal would hurt like hell. Burning your insides and screaming in pain…sorry if I was a bit descriptive ^_^;
….
that was disturbing
1rst!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! good story happy 4th of july