A Girl in Black and White (Alyria 2) - Page 110

I was just a child, doing chores, and smiling up at my grandmother.

I was a little older trampling through the stream from the neighbor’s.

I was older still, smiling at a boy from across the pew in mass, and deciding I might not think they are so gross after all.

I was eighteen, staring at the stars and feeling more out of place than ever before. Though it wasn’t the place, the town—it was my skin.

I was twenty, with a shadowed Titan standing behind my back.

To now as I stood here, the image of me looking into this very well.

To tomorrow.

Close my eyes. Close my eyes.

To . . .

My lungs tightened. Please stop . . .

“Please stop,” the well mocked.

To my future. To darkness.

“Look into that well .

. .” spoke back at me on a reel.

I closed my eyes tight, shutting out the images, but they still played in my mind. The sound of a ticking clock in my ears. Tick, tock. Tick, tock. Tick, tock.

I pushed myself away from the well, sucking in a large breath.

Anger, frustration, it all welled up in me and came out in tears down my cheeks. I looked up to see a crowd watching me hesitantly.

I walked away, down the street.

I never screamed.

I walked away, knowing what my future held for me, and knowing that I couldn’t change it. That the path I was walking had already been laid beneath my feet and I couldn’t take another one.

When the church bell rang eight times, I barely recognized it until the very last one.

My perspective had changed from looking into that well. And I realized I had nothing to lose. Not when I could see my future in front of my eyes. Dark. Alone.

I headed in the direction of the northern docks with resolve, but with an unwavering sense of unease. I might not have had anything to lose, but that didn’t mean I didn’t fear rejection.

The heat wave had been letting up, a slight breeze carrying the hotter temperature away, and I sucked in a large breath, calming my trepidation.

The sun was falling behind the ocean, the silhouettes of ships floating on the water. I walked down the docks toward the Titan vessel at the Northie harbor, trying to find Weston’s form among the sailors loading the ship.

I stilled, my heart pattering when I saw him walk down the ship’s ramp into the loading area. As if he felt my stare, his gaze flicked in my direction.

He was wearing a western leather jerkin, and it made my heart feel heavy. I had no idea how’d I’d gotten here, but I had. What was it about this man? Why couldn’t I merely forget him? I didn’t know. But it didn’t matter because it wasn’t happening.

I knew there would be no happily ever after, no matter how my grandmother’s story went. But I couldn’t let the words I never said haunt me forever.

How did you even begin to tell a man how you felt, a man who you knew had never shared those words with anyone and probably never would? How did I hang on to my pride and admit it? And then it dawned on me: I would always have my pride.

I realized at that moment, bravery and honesty were much more important in the long run than pride ever was.

Tags: Danielle Lori Alyria Fantasy
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