03-06-2023, 08:14 PM
the thorn wreath a wreath of thorns adorn the door. |
No matter the assurance of her parents, the coming of the full moon was always a time of great unease. Its silver light made her skin crawl beneath the touch of her own grasp - a sorry attempt at self soothing whims. She sits, as she does most evenings, by the window in the upper floor of the manor. Curious eyes lining the walkways and tracing the passing faces. Some of them have become all too familiar, almost intimate in the ways they come and go like a mockery of the sun dial's long shadow. She can tell the time of day by their presence and the direction in which they're going. A young mother usually struggles with two seemingly unruly boys early in the morning, tugging them along by their sleeves, or their napes if they've been particularly misbehaved. This signals that it's nearly eight. In the evening, she normally walks back to their home across the cobbled road with her arm tucked within the elbow of who must be her husband. Their children are very well behaved in his presence. This return comes in the early evening, normally no later than half past four, though she has seen them close to five should they be toting sweets or some other treat. Today, there came a difference in the day to day routine. A carriage pulled up in front of the home, and she would raise slightly in her seat, all the while trying not to draw the ire of her current tutor. The woman was quite irritable after all, and had little patience for Arabella's regretfully limited attention span for fine artistry and its history. More time than not, her thin lips were pulled into an even thinner line that seemed affixed in a permanent downward slope. Her brows would raise slightly in somewhat of a pointless effort to see more over the window's ledge. However, all pretense of being sly deserted her as she caught a glimpse of the pale blonde hair that stepped from the wagon. She had seen him in paintings that littered the home. Often times, she was in them as well, though she didn't recall them. she didn't recall him. Yet she knew him, and she had been anxiously waiting to meet him once more. It was in hopes that this morose feeling of knowing the unknown would dissipate. She yearned to remember, and he was the only one of their family that she had yet to see in person. "Miss Beleveron! Sit down this instant!" Came the furious hiss of the instructor, followed by the sharp tap of the pointing stick across the table in emphasis. "O-oh, but my brother's home!" She stammered slightly in the throes of her excitement, a habit she loathed, but was unable to surpass when afflicted by emotion. Before the woman could lock the doors on her (again), she bolted from the chamber, the lengthy, unpleasant dress tails lifted high within her hands as bare feet quickly traversed the cold marble of the floor with surprisingly quiet steps. Out of breath, but beaming furiously, she would beat the butler to the door upon the first knock of the handle, throwing it wide open. Her infectious simper would only grow as she panted out, "H-hello! Welcome home!" |
no one comes home anymore |
Jahi