Prologue: Evangeline

1K 10 2
                                    

Rebellion

Prologue: Evangeline

            I was very young when my mother was taken from us—barely four. My memories of her fade more and more with every year that passes. Now, so much later, I have only dim recollections left: a flash of kind, gray eyes, one iris tainted by white. A lilting voice that could make my name sound like music. A pair of arms wrapped tightly around me, promising to never let go.

            Rose doesn’t understand my fears that I may forget her. “She was our mother,” she just shrugs. “How could we forget her?”

            I have never been like Rosemary. She has always been the bright, bold twin. I, on the other hand, am the painfully shy one. I hold onto the few people I have tightly. And this is why losing my mother’s memory pains me. I must remember. I must.

            I listen to the stories that my grandparents and aunts and uncles tell of her, and I realize how little I truly know of the woman who was my mother. I knew her for a brief period of time, but she lived for years before that. She lived most of her life before my birth. There is so much that I do not know; so much that I wish to learn.

            Perhaps, if I learn enough about her, I will be able to understand her. Perhaps if I can understand her, I can discover how she managed to bear the burden that comes from being set apart. Perhaps then I would not feel so alone.

            For I am different, too.

            I have her eyes.

            I, too, am marked by Ailune.

            And I, too, am set apart from those around me.

            Maybe somewhere in my mother’s story is the answer to mine.

RebellionWhere stories live. Discover now