FRANCESCA
I was out of breath when I finally finished speaking and the old woman was staring at me blankly, like I was a radio she was listening to. I stared back at her.Then she smiled and stood to her feet. I watched her walk to the end of the room and go to a wardrobe where she pulled out a drawer. She picked something from it, closed the drawer, and walked back to me, slowly, her smile still on her face.Her skin was paler than in my dream and her hair was more grey than I had thought it was. I was getting to see her features much better now that she was standing right before me in reality.She sat back on her chair and handed me a necklace with a pearl locket."Do you remember this?" She asked me and I stared at it intently with my eyes narrowed."Am I supposed to?"The necklace did look familiar but I could not tell where I had seen it or who it belonged to."Yes," she looked hurt but she smiled again, and the hurt vanished from her eyes, "Well, I do not expect you to remember. You were only a little girl when you had it.""I think you are mistaken, ma. I'm not the girl you are thinking I am. My name is Francesca.""Enough!" The old woman shouted to my greatest surprise. Her voice had always been so velvety soft but now, it sounded like the roar of thunder. At that moment, she looked like a completely different person.If I thought she was only a weak old lady, I was wrong. This woman was scary and my observation sent fear down my spine.She must have noticed this because she sighed heavily and dropped her head."I'm sorry for shouting." Her voice was back to being soft."But I need you to listen to me. When I say I know you, I am not mistaken. I do know you and this is why I appeared in your dream to let you know who you truly are. I have waited so long, child. I had to wait till you were old enough before I appeared to you. It's time to know your identity. It's time to take back what is yours. Welcome home, child." She smiled brightly, revealing her diastema.I stared blankly at her,"I do not understand," I told her and she sighed."The woman who died a year ago as you said is not your mother. Though I must commend her for doing a good job in raising you, she is not your mother and that is not your world. Here is."I stared at her, unable to speak because none of what she had just said made sense to me.Still smiling, the old woman stood up again, this time returning with a mirror which she handed over to me. I looked at her and she urged me to look into the mirror.When I finally did, I screamed in horror.The first thing I noticed was the white hair on my head and my long pointy ears. Shocked, the mirror dropped from my hand but the old woman was quick to catch it before it fell to the hard floor."Careful," she said to me but I grabbed the mirror from her hand and stared right back."Who is this woman in the mirror?" I asked, terrified.The image staring back at me looked quite different from me. Though it was my face, I could not understand where the long ears and beautiful white hair that fell at my back in unruly curls came from. My dull hazel eyes were now a more beautiful shade and my lips looked fuller than usual.I looked prettier than usual. It was as though my look had been enhanced and I wondered how that was possible."The woman in the mirror is you.""It's not true." I shook my head, holding the mirror to my face and placing my hand on my ear as if seeing it was not enough. How could my ear grow this long? What was going on?I held a lock of my hair and brought it to my eyes but I gasped when I realised that it was white, just like the reflection on the mirror. How could this be?"This is you, Mila. This is the real you. I have a lot to tell you, Mila, but you need to rest. I will tell you all about it later. You have a whole world ahead of you and in this world, there are quite some enemies. But the good thing is that you're back. Your father will be glad to see you." She smiled, reaching out to touch my face but I backed away.None of this made sense to me. It didn't feel like reality.Perhaps, I was beginning to make up a new world just as I had made up a relationship where there was none. Perhaps, I had read too much fantasy and the knowledge was starting to haunt me.Without a word to the old woman, I pushed myself out of the wooden bed. It was annoying how everything seemed to be made out of wood in this damn place. It looked like an old crappy building and it stank of the muskiness of old books; I could not wait to get out of there.So I did just that, walking slowly to the door which was ahead of me. My head was aching badly and my body was trembling in pain but I ignored all this, walking slowly to the door.There was no way I was gonna remain in this house, listening to this old lady tell me lies. My mother was not my mother? Bullshit!"What are you doing?" The old woman asked, her voice laced with amusement.I could not believe she found this to be funny.I ignored her, my eyes fixated on the door. My legs were shaky but I kept walking.The door seemed to get farther and farther away as I walked but I kept walking. I was determined to keep walking until I got out. I would surely do that even if I had to crawl."Where are you going?" The old woman was up on her feet."I'm going home," I shouted, quickening my pace. "I don't care about you or your so-called world. I'm going home!""And where is home?" The old woman's voice was filled with mockery. She did not look like the sweet old woman she had been a moment ago. "If what you call home is your life before now, do you think you'll find your way back?""I don't care! As long as I am away from you and your world." My voice broke."Mila," she dragged the name, walking right behind me. "You are more than five hundred years away from your world. You can't go back to the future, my dear. Your time in that world is over.""What?" I turned sharply to look at her. "What do you mean the future? I'm only twenty-five!""Mila — ""Stop calling me that! Goddamnit!" I cursed at her, a tear slipping from my eyes.She stared right back at me before sighing heavily, "I thought it would be best for you to rest properly before I explain things to you but since you're that eager, I'll tell you. But come sit down first."I looked at her, pondering on what to do. Should I remain here, listening to her fish story or should I leave?Feeling too exhausted, I allowed myself to be led back to the bed and I sat down, waiting for the woman to begin her tale.She cleared her throat, still holding my hand in hers. I wanted to pull my hand from her grip but I decided to endure.Then she began to tell me about the elf King, King Dale who according to her was my father.RIOOwen's brown wolf had his ears pointed slightly forward and its forehead, neck hair and hackles were raised. Ivory teeth appeared between his jaws, his tongue moving around his mouth with saliva dripping from its lips. I wondered if it was trying to scare me but my wolf was not one to be intimidated. I was bigger than he was and more ferocious. We both swung our heads and with our bodies low in a crouch position, we began slinking slowly towards each other whilst keeping our eyes on each other. Owen's brown wolf immediately rushed forward to lunge at my left flank but my grey wolf was quick to dodge. As a result, we got involved in a confrontation and Owen thought he could defeat me by targeting my injured shoulder. But I knew his trick and after a moment of fighting hard, I finally got a chance to sink my sharp canine into his flesh. He growled in pain, his eyes on his freshly sustained wound just above his thigh. Before he could fully retract, I snapped at his head, pulling t
RIO"Alpha Rio!" He screamed and somehow, his guttural scream seemed to affect my thinking faculty. I turned to look at him and this was when Owen got the chance to do what he had always wanted to do from the start. He stroked me on the shoulder and the sword blade cut through my skin. I groaned, inhaling sharply as pain spread through my body. I looked at Owen and found him smiling crookedly at me. The men were back to hailing and this fuelled Owen's ego. "I told you I'll kill you." He blurted out. Though in pain, I tried to smile at him. "Is this all you can do?" I chuckled and the smile fell off his face. To spite me, he pulled the sword out, making sure to pull some of my flesh with it. Unable to bear the pain silently, I let out a painful growl. Blood was trickling from the cut and the sight of my blood made me mad. I stared at my injured shoulder a little longer and when I looked up, all I could see was red. If I thought I had been angry before, then I thought wrong. Now, m
RIOHowever, Owen stopped a foot away from us, his eyes fixed on Jake. He wouldn't come any closer. "Aren't you supposed to be training?" He asked loudly and Jake's head jerked up in surprise. "Owen." He said softly. "I asked you a question." Owen thundered this time and I rolled my eyes. He was being too dramatic. The men who had been talking happily stopped what they were doing to look at us. Since Owen was facing us, he could not see the scene he was making. "Training is yet to start. They are still welding the swords." "So what? Aren't you grown enough to join them? Rather you sit here with this. . ." He threw me a glance, then shook his head in irritation. "Eating apple. Since when did you become this lazy?" I was starting to get angry but I remained calm, chewing gently as I ate my apple. It would be better for everyone if I just ate my apple in peace. "You know I'm not lazy," Jake mumbled. "I'm only waiting for them to start our training. You just don't like that I'm sit
RIO It was the evening of that day and I was sitting under a large tree, watching the men joke around with one another. There were about ten of them and they talked at the top of their voices as they sharpened their swords. I could recognise three out of them as men I had beaten up back then when we fought.Though I had only beaten three up, all of them shot glares at me each time their eyes met with mine. It was clear that the men had recounted their encounter with me to the rest, such that they all considered me as their enemy. I had even overheard one of them ask why I was still there with them even after spending a full day. Funny enough, I didn't have an answer to that question. It was the same question I was asking myself even as I watched them. I had fully recovered so I had no reason to remain here. I should be on my way but the question was where exactly was I going? Was I ready to return to wandering in the forest like a wild homeless animal? If I was being honest, I wa
FRANCESCA Though I did not want to show it, I was really starting to get afraid by her words. I found myself wondering what we would do if we got attacked by these beastly creatures in the middle of the night. Ava was right, there was a first time for everything. When she saw that I was quiet, she began to bounce on her feet. "Come on, don't overthink it." "I'm not. It's a no. I'll pass." I tried to remain stubborn. I would not easily give in. "Come on, Francesca. I know you don't want to spend the rest of your day lying in your bedroom." "I won't. I must save a land. I won't just be wasting away on my bed." I said before I could think. I looked up quickly to gauge Ava's countenance but she did not seem to hear what I had just said. "Why don't you come to visit us today? Hm?" She was negotiating. "You can return home later. I can ascertain that your grandmother is not in at the moment. I'll make sure you get back before her arrival if that is what you are scared of. What do you
FRANCESCAThe sound was swift but I heard it. It was the steps of a person walking around the cottage and I sat up in bed, wondering who it was. I knew it was not Madam Creese or was it? It was too early for her to return from her long trip. That morning, she had dressed up in her black cloak and had told me to remain indoors while she went into town to see someone. Regardless of how much I asked, she would not give me the full details of her so-called journey, all she had been concerned about was that I remained indoors while she was away. That had made me so angry that I had burst out in anger, accusing her of caging me like a kid, but after my outburst, all she had done was shake her head at me like I was an unbearable child, then she said, "It is for your safety, my dear." "Why won't you let me come with you then? It's been many days since I got here and all I've seen is this ugly cottage. I want to come to town too. I want to see this world and the people in it!" I had tried