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The Butterfly Palace

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The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Wed Dec 14, 2005 1:47 pm

[center]Image[/center]

Title The Butterfly Palace
Author Emms
Disclaimer Joss owns everything. Please don't sue
Rating R
Feedback of course
Setting completely AU
Notes I needed a little something to flex my fingers on in hopes of prompting inspiration for some of my other works in progress so I started writing. I held no intention this would go anywhere beyond the mixed up files in my "documents folder" but alas here I am...once again laying yet another something at your feet. I hope you have no tomatoes to throw.

Chapter One: Into the world

Sheela staggered deep into the field, as far away from the noises inside her father’s house as she could get. “Oh how inconvenient you already are,” she spoke with affectionate irritation toward the roundness of her protruding stomach. It clenched in response as the baby inside tangled its foot on an organ or two, in preparation to leave its cramped living quarters. It was only a matter of time now, Sheela told herself.

She suspected it would be born soon, as she’d felt her womb contracting in steady intervals during the last few hours. But it had only been in the last hour or so that the pain had grown unbearable and she‘d been forced to leave the cottage in search of a safer place to birth her unborn child.

The field was as good a place as any, she presumed, though she didn’t care too much for the windy climate. She supposed it would have to do in any event, as she couldn’t afford the luxury of pickiness this close to delivery.

She carried, tucked on her arm the bassinette she’d woven from the bark of a Willow tree some months ago. Though she steadily fought down the hope that this one might be spared.

Sheela folded as another contraction hit with force, but recovered quickly, partially out of bravery…but mostly to save face lest someone be watching from a ruddy window somewhere unknown to her. She didn’t suspect this to be probable because it was election day and most of the towns people would have already left to cast their votes in the densely populated capital of Tarn. Hadn’t she seen folks loading their wagons that morning? She questioned, but dismissed the notion instantly. It was no matter, because any chance was a chance she could not take

Sheela lay down on the hard earth. The waving tendrils of brownish-yellow grass tickled her bared arms, irritating her and causing her to scratch at her skin in order to relieve the itch. The field, she surmised, had not been one of her better ideas. But it would have to do, she reminded herself hotly as she barred down into another contraction. Perspiration spilled onto her brow, dampening her skin and causing the reddish colored hair of her bangs to stick, darkening its own color into more of a brick red in the wetness of her forehead.

Sheela drifted in and out of consciousness, all the while the child inside her butted up against her cervix as if to push itself into the world…as well as make a statement to its lax mother. Sheela recovered a little, in time to feel the pressure in her womb intensify. And then there was an unbearable pain followed by the immediate need to push. Sheela gritted her teeth and with all the strength in her body she PUSHED.

There was no need to get attached, she told herself. If it was a girl it would be drowned soon enough, if not by her husband, then by her elderly father, she was certain; there was nothing she could do about that. And if it was a boy it would be sold to the highest bidder shortly after weaning; the same as if it were a puppy or some other pitiful creature.

There was a gush of blood; Sheela heard herself scream, followed by a squall from the unfortunate infant. The heady smell of afterbirth and sweat mixed in the air and stung tartly in Sheela’s nostrils. For a moment there was silence, save for the sound of the wind driving past them in whips and lashes. In the looming quiet Sheela became frightened that something had gone wrong. Why had the newborn stopped wailing?

Sheela reached between her bunched skirts, her groping hand searching for the placid infant. She felt something beneath her fingers and her hand instinctively closed around the appendage; she thought it might be the baby’s arm or a leg at least. Sheela pulled without affection on the thing grasped in her hand; she brought the baby into view for the first time.

It was a girl and hardly the most attractive creature she’d ever seen, it was wrinkled and tinged with a blue cast to its skin; but alive and breathing nonetheless. She wrinkled her nose at the infant “I certainly have seen prettier ones,” she said to it with sweet contempt; not sure if she really meant it, or simply needed something to say in the moment.

Still, despite its appearance she had to admit there was something sweet about the way it seemed to look up at her, its foggy eyes blurred and unfocused. Sheela wondered if the baby’s eyes might turn out to be green like her own, given the chance to grow into itself--but that was foolish, she scolded. There was no hope for this child’s survival and to even contemplate the idea was an effort it futility. Her next instinct was to drown the child herself that she might spare it living long enough to grasp an understanding of life. But deep down she knew she couldn’t do that--she didn’t have heart enough.

Sheela wiped her hand down the baby's body to clean it as much as she could, before laying it in the Willow-bark basket. “Oh, don’t look at me so. Do you think this is my doing? Well, I can tell you most certainly that it is not.” Sheela talked to the baby as if it could understand her. “I didn’t ask for this,” she said, speaking of her life on a grander scale to the infant who merely stared. “And I didn’t ask for you!” She said pointedly, the tone to her voice growing as sharp as a knife.

But the baby kicked its feet in response to Sheela’s ill tempered words and she could feel her own heart beating in her chest; the rhythm of it caused the ice that had formed there over the years to melt slightly. “What should I call you then?” She breathed out in a sigh. “Mildred?” she said, but stuck her tongue out at the thought. “I know…how about Brunhilda?” Sheela clucked her tongue at the thought. “No, that won’t do. You’re ugly--but not that ugly.” Then Sheela caught sight of the basket in which the baby lay… “Willow,” She said, testing the quality of the name. It seemed to fit. “Willow it is, then.”

Sheela didn’t know how yet, but she knew she’d have to come up with something to save this one…she had to save this one.

TBC
Last edited by Emms on Sun Jan 29, 2006 8:47 pm, edited 10 times in total.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby kindagay » Wed Dec 14, 2005 1:48 pm

Dibs!

:bounce

------------------------------------------------------------------

Okay, feedback now :)

Emms, where do you get all of your wonderful ideas from?
I can't tell you how very excited I was to see that you have a new fic, it was like, the best early Christmas present I could ever have wished for. :D

You certainly have me intrigued sweetie, that was a very interesting beginning (to your story, & indeed to Willow's life).
It was a girl and hardly the most attractive creature she’d ever seen
Aww bless her, poor Willow.

Okay, I have a little enquirey, I kind of half got the feeling that Willow isn't Sheela's first child - is that right? :confused

It must be so difficult for Sheela, trying so hard not to get attached to the baby because she knows that it will be taken away, but not quite being able to deny her maternal feelings. I loved the way you wrote that internal struggle with her own feelings, it was subtle (not like, big angst) but it had a definite impact. :clap

Then Sheela caught sight of the basket in which the baby lay… “Willow,” She said, testing the quality of the name. It seemed to fit. “Willow it is, then.”

So that's how Willow got her name :lol I always wondered about that.
& I am glad she decided against Mildred & Brunhilda :)

Sheela didn’t know how yet, but she knew she’d have to come up with something to save this one…she had to save this one

Will we get to see how she manages to save Willow? Or shall we be skipping ahead to see an older Willow in the next update? :hmm

Thank you so much for sharing this new creative endeavour of yours sweetie. :) I look forward to more.

Hugs
Jeanne
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby will » Wed Dec 14, 2005 4:41 pm

a new one...cool!
I love all your story and the start of this one too is really good i can't wait to read more please update soon.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby spells42 » Wed Dec 14, 2005 7:06 pm

What an interesting start. Your sympathetic portrayal of Sheela giving birth without support and without hope, to an infant doomed to death or, what, slavery? Intriguing hints of the world she is in being elsewhere, that is, not earth, and not now.

most of the towns people would have already left to cast their votes in the densely populated capital of Tarn. Hadn’t she seen folks loading their wagons that morning?


Reminiscent of McCaffrey's dragon world - can't think of the name of it just now - in its rural and technologically backward state. ???

So poor Willow begins life - I wonder how her imminent death is avoided, and what her life will be like. Not happy, I'm betting.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby tarebear » Thu Dec 15, 2005 6:43 am

yey! a new story from ms emms! :dance :dance

this is really an intriguing start to i'm sure another wonderful tale... i'm glad sheela had the heart to save this little girl may she be wrinkled and ugly as she put it.... but how is she supposed to do this when she cannot keep her as she knows the baby would be drowned? the only alternative i can think of is that she will have to give the baby up to a couple/family who would gladly care for her or she might just leave it on the doorstep of some house... boy, willow has a rough start already and she is just a baby! i hope things get better for her as time goes by... also, sheela might think willow is an ugly and wrinkly baby, but i'm sure she is going to grow up a beautiful woman sought after by everyone.

of course i can't wait to find out how you introduce tara in this story.
it has also intrigued me why this particular story is called butterfly palace... can't wait to find out why.

bravo ms emms! . :clap :clap :clap definitely another story for me to look out for!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Thu Dec 15, 2005 9:15 am

Because these things tend to come quickly at first (at least for me, they do) the next chapter is ready to post. :-D
********************************************************************************
Jeanne, Hi there, sweetie!

I'm glad you liked the set up.

It must be so difficult for Sheela, trying so hard not to get attached to the baby because she knows that it will be taken away, but not quite being able to deny her maternal feelings. I loved the way you wrote that internal struggle with her own feelings, it was subtle (not like, big angst) but it had a definite impact.


Thank you. :blush

Will we get to see how she manages to save Willow? Or shall we be skipping ahead to see an older Willow in the next update?


There's one more small chapter with Willow as a baby...and then I think I'll be moving on from there. :-D

Thank you so much for sharing this new creative endeavour of yours sweetie.


No...thank you for not throwing tomatoes. :lol

***************************************************************************

Will Thank you. I'm gald you're enjoying. :x

***************************************************************************
spells42 Hi there, Anne. :wave

Your sympathetic portrayal of Sheela giving birth without support and without hope, to an infant doomed to death or, what, slavery? Intriguing hints of the world she is in being elsewhere, that is, not earth, and not now.


Great observation, sweetie. :|

Reminiscent of McCaffrey's dragon world - can't think of the name of it just now - in its rural and technologically backward state. ???


Well I'm with you on the rural and technologically backward state. :-D

*****************************************************************************

Hi Tarebear, my favorite little artist! I'm so happy you are liking the story so far! Thank you for the wonderful feedback, sweetie. :-D

i'm glad sheela had the heart to save this little girl may she be wrinkled and ugly as she put it.... but how is she supposed to do this when she cannot keep her as she knows the baby would be drowned?


Where there is a will (no pun intended) there is a way.
:-D

********************************************************************************
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Thu Dec 15, 2005 9:26 am

All Disclaimers Apply

Chapter Two

“What is it?”

The old man grizzled, sneering at the bundle in Sheela’s arms. But Sheela feigned disinterest, as much as she could without dropping the baby. “It’s a baby,” Sheela skirted, stalling for a few precious moments.

She’d brought the infant in, swaddled in a roughened potato sack that she’d found laying outside. It was an ample covering, and served to hide the infant from her father’s prying eyes. She couldn’t let anyone know the true sex of the baby in her arms.

“I know that you fool!” He shuffled closer and coughed, his ragged lungs rattled and wheezed with old age. “What kind of baby is it; a boy, or a girl?” He gruffed loudly, and pointed his bony finger at the baby.

“It’s a boy,” Sheela said, trying her best to sound like nothing was amiss.

“Here, give it to me. I want to see for myself,” he said sharply, and then mumbled loudly in a cross voice, “you cant trust women as far as you can throw them, everyone knows that.”

Sheela gripped the baby tighter and sidestepped the old man “ It hasn’t been washed properly,” she said, with too much exuberance. “You’ll mess your shirt, father.” Sheela forced her voice to soften.

“What’s its name, then?”

“Willow,” Sheela said quickly. “Will, for short,” she followed, when she saw the old man leering at her through his one good eye as if he still didn‘t quite believe her.

“What has your husband to say about all this? I can’t imagine he’s happy about it.”

“I doubt he’ll even notice what with the reelection at hand,” Sheela said, busying herself under the cupboard.

“The reelection won’t last all year, mind you.” Father cackled, then coughed something up out of his lungs, but swallowed it promptly and went on. “I’m sure he’ll notice before then; it’s hard to miss another mouth to feed.”

Now that the sex of the baby seemed to be accepted by her father, Sheela felt bolder both in her words and actions. “I can’t see how that’s any of your business anyway, you old goat. You’re lucky Ihram doesn’t put you out to starve in the fields.”

“He couldn’t do such a thing…imagine the scandal.”

It was a well known fact that Ihram Rosenblatt was running for Mayor in Tarn and any undue scandal would result in a decline at the polls. Sheela thought about the girl baby in her arms…if anyone were to find out about it she knew it would surely spell doom for Ihram, father and herself. She was mostly worried about herself though; beheading was a common practice, and she surmised; a painful practice, at that. Sheela’s free hand came of it’s own accord to the pearliness of her neck caressing it as if it was already bound for the chopping block.

Father spit into the handkerchief he had palmed in his hand. Sheela almost gagged; she hated when he did that, and suspected he only did it to annoy her.

With her former venom restored she shot a look at the bedraggled old man “Oh he could, and he would. You’d just better mind yourself if you want my opinion,” Sheela said. The babe in her arms squirmed and began small squeaking noises at the front of her dress.

“I suppose you’ll have to feed it,” father stated.

If he had his way Sheela would let the thing starve. “I know that!” Sheela snapped. She wished her father would go back to bed and leave her alone.

They both stopped bickering, and turned, wide-eyed, toward the sound of the wooden door as it creaked open. It was Ihram back from Tarn.
*************************************************************************************

Sheela was pleased to note that Ihram took about as much note in the new baby as he did in housework-- none at all.

Sheela took the baby, basket and all into the bathroom. She hadn’t been alone with the infant since this morning and was curious to see it unclothed again.

She laid it down on the splintered floor and unwrapped it from the sack. It was pinker than before and dryer…but had grown no more attractive since the last viewing. “We sure fooled them didn’t we?” she said, cradling the infant to her breast for the first time.

The first signs of motherly instinct toward the baby flowered in her stomach as she watched her daughter nurse enthusiastically. Sheela ran her finger across the baby’s fine, red hair; it was matted and could’ve done with a washing. “Willow…” Sheela said for only the fourth time that day.

TBC
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby tmr » Thu Dec 15, 2005 1:51 pm

any women who can walk after child birth and take on her father deserves a bloody reward. keep going with the story its brill.

from a english friend

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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby kindagay » Thu Dec 15, 2005 2:44 pm

Hi Emms :wave

Well, you have been a busy little bee, haven't you sweetie? :) 2 updates in 2 days - you're spoiling us.

Well, I'm still intrigued, which is definitely of the good.

I don't think I like Father, Sheela gets a big yay! for standing up to him.

It’s a boy,” Sheela said, trying her best to sound like nothing was amiss.
:hmm So, was Willow raised as a boy then? So that she wouldn't be drowned. Although, that would mean that she was sold & I can't imagine that whoever bought her was happy about her not being a boy, 'cos they would have figured that out eventually.
Oh, I'm so confused, please write more soon, I need to know what happened to Willow, & how she's gonna get to meet Tara...

Sheela was pleased to note that Ihram took about as much note in the new baby as he did in housework-- none at all.
Now is Ihram just too busy with important Mayor business, or is he an ass? I'm thinking he's probably an ass, in which case, I don't like him either.
:hmm Are there any pleasant men in this story?

Well, I gotta say it again sweetie, thank you for sharing this creation with us, it's wonderful. :)

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Jeanne
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby will » Thu Dec 15, 2005 4:57 pm

I love the update.
So she decide to hide that willow is a girl, I'm wondering how much time it will take before they discover the truth.(If they ever realised)
Please update soon.
*Will*

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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby onelesstraveled » Thu Dec 15, 2005 11:07 pm

Ms Emms, I'm delighted to find another one of your stories on Pens, and what an interesting premise you have here. Now that Sheela has successfully convinced her father and Ihram of the child's sex (..well maybe not so much convinced but concealed), what will become the fate of our baby boy Will?

I like your Sheela. I see a woman who has turned bitter at the world and her place in it, and yet still finds herself fighting nonetheless.

Looking forward to reading about a grown up Willow and her thoughts on her upbringing. You've got me intrigued about Tara's background also. Will she be introduced to us soon?

Great start!

ETA: I've been thinking how the title fits into your story as well, but I guess I'll need more clues to figure it out. (How's that for a subtle prompt for an update :flirt )
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby spells42 » Sun Dec 18, 2005 5:06 am

Emms
I'm really not liking this place. What kind of world is it where children have no place? And just as a matter of interest, if everybody thinks like that, how do they ever produce enough people to work and keep the species going?
OK, so she's got about 13 years before it will become more difficult to pretend to be a boy (I wonder will Willow know she's a girl and not a boy?). Years of fear for both of them by the sound of it.
You've got me dying to know how they survive, and when and where Tara will come on the scene. Will she be a pretend boy too?
Looking forward to more.
Anne
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby tarebear » Sun Dec 18, 2005 9:23 am

oh hey! an update already? yey! :bounce :bounce

“It’s a boy,” Sheela said, trying her best to sound like nothing was amiss.


sheela was a genius!

“We sure fooled them didn’t we?” she said, cradling the infant to her breast for the first time.


you sure did sheela! even i never thought that hehe

but how long will she be able to hide the truth? how long before the men find out about it (if they ever at all)? how long before willow realizes that she indeed is not a boy (asuming that sheela hides this fact from her as well)? how long before we are graced with another great update? ooops, that slipped out! *hint* *hint*

The first signs of motherly instinct toward the baby flowered in her stomach as she watched her daughter nurse enthusiastically. Sheela ran her finger across the baby’s fine, red hair; it was matted and could’ve done with a washing. “Willow…” Sheela said for only the fourth time that day.


beautifu! :clap :clap :clap

great job ms emms! keep up the wonderful work! i will surely be coming back for more!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Sat Dec 24, 2005 9:41 am

Hi everyone, here are some replies to keep you busy while you wait....I'm hard at work on the next update!

********************************************************************************
tmr, Thank you. :-D

*******************************************************************************

Jeanne!

So, was Willow raised as a boy then? So that she wouldn't be drowned. Although, that would mean that she was sold & I can't imagine that whoever bought her was happy about her not being a boy, 'cos they would have figured that out eventually.
Oh, I'm so confused, please write more soon, I need to know what happened to Willow, & how she's gonna get to meet Tara...


all will be answered, I'm sure. :-D No need to be confused sweetie. I'm pretty sure that if Willow is raised as a boy, it was only because no one cared enough to pay attention....which in this story...would make sense.

Now is Ihram just too busy with important Mayor business, or is he an ass? I'm thinking he's probably an ass, in which case, I don't like him either.
Are there any pleasant men in this story?


yes, I'll go with ass, as well.

***************************************************************************

will Hi there!

Thank you so much for reading and leaving feedback. :-D

****************************************************************************

onelesstraveled

Ms Emms, I'm delighted to find another one of your stories on Pens, and what an interesting premise you have here. Now that Sheela has successfully convinced her father and Ihram of the child's sex (..well maybe not so much convinced but concealed), what will become the fate of our baby boy Will?


Thank you. :blush though...I think I may have too many stories. hehe. I can't say what Will's fate will be, exactly...'cause that would give away the story :-D but I'm sure everyone has guessed the :wtkiss part. :-D

I like your Sheela. I see a woman who has turned bitter at the world and her place in it, and yet still finds herself fighting nonetheless.


Thank you. I like this Sheela as well...in fact, I'm finding it difficult to move on, because I really am enjoying writing her.

Looking forward to reading about a grown up Willow and her thoughts on her upbringing. You've got me intrigued about Tara's background also. Will she be introduced to us soon?


Oh...I'm almost certain.

I've been thinking how the title fits into your story as well, but I guess I'll need more clues to figure it out. (How's that for a subtle prompt for an update


very subtle indeed. :lol I'm sure the title will become clear before too long... :-D

Thank you for the wonderful feedback!

************************************************************************************
Irene Hi Sweetie!!

Como estas? It's been a while hasn't it? You know I would leave fb on a more frequent basis if I had the time. Good news is, I now have the time for a quick session.


No worries. Feedback is not mandatory (but it's nice. :lol ) I certainly know how not having a lot of time can be...I too have fallen far behind on feedbacking due to a lack of time. But it's good to hear from you again!

I'm with Jeanne on this one; How do you come up with these wonderful stories? So original and sweet.


Aww, thank you. :blush

So when do we get to read about baby Tara?


Soon :| though, i'm not too sure about the baby part.

Great fic Emms. Please know that even though I might not leave fb each and every time you update ANY of your fics, I am reading them. I absoultely love your stories and I'm always looking foward to your next updates.



You are too kind, my dear. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

*****************************************************************************

spells42

I'm really not liking this place. What kind of world is it where children have no place? And just as a matter of interest, if everybody thinks like that, how do they ever produce enough people to work and keep the species going?


um....robots? :blush Actually, I haven't gotten to that part of the story yet...but I will get there. I promise. :|

OK, so she's got about 13 years before it will become more difficult to pretend to be a boy (I wonder will Willow know she's a girl and not a boy?). Years of fear for both of them by the sound of it.


I doubt it would be that difficult, especially for Willow. Tara might have a difficult time of it though.

Thank you so much for leaving feedback. I love that you have so many questions. :glasses

***************************************************************************
tarebear

but how long will she be able to hide the truth? how long before the men find out about it (if they ever at all)? how long before willow realizes that she indeed is not a boy (asuming that sheela hides this fact from her as well)? how long before we are graced with another great update? ooops, that slipped out! *hint* *hint*


Oooo you have lots and lots of questions...too bad I can't answer any of them right now.... :lol

Thank you so much sweetie!!

******************************************************************************

xoxo
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby AlysonGoddess » Sat Dec 24, 2005 9:57 pm

Wow your really starting from the beginning I like! :) Great start cant wait to see the rest.. please update soon
happy holidays!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby watty » Wed Dec 28, 2005 6:12 am

Very intriguing, Emmy. For some reason "Butterfly Palace" gives me an overwhelming sense of the Orient there. It's almost like one of those historical Japanese dramas, with the focus on male heir / strong hands production, a strong class system and almost no value placed on human life. Sheela shows remarkable strength and resistance, both towards her father and her husband. I hope that trait passes onto young Willow.

Now please feel free to completely dismiss this speculation, but again thinking about the title and the feel I have of this setting, I'd like to think young Will was sold to be a servant in a titled household. Going with the Japanese theme, I have a geisha house in mind. And wow, Tara in a kimono.

Okay, totally wild guess over.

In just 2 short chapters you've painted an interesting universe, strong characters, even though none of them likeable. Good stuff.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Sat Dec 31, 2005 5:27 pm

Hi everyone...update next; replies first.

**********************************************************

AlysonGoddess I'm glad you're liking the story. Thank you for leaving a few kind words. :x

*************************************************************
Watty

Very intriguing, Emmy. For some reason "Butterfly Palace" gives me an overwhelming sense of the Orient there. It's almost like one of those historical Japanese dramas, with the focus on male heir / strong hands production, a strong class system and almost no value placed on human life. Sheela shows remarkable strength and resistance, both towards her father and her husband. I hope that trait passes onto young Willow.


Sort of...but I wasn't really trying to go in that direction with it. But I can see where you'd see that, especially because of the Title...Actually, to tell the truth, I'm not really sure where this is going...so far the details of their world are kind of writing themselves as I go.

Now please feel free to completely dismiss this speculation, but again thinking about the title and the feel I have of this setting, I'd like to think young Will was sold to be a servant in a titled household. Going with the Japanese theme, I have a geisha house in mind. And wow, Tara in a kimono.


A kimono sounds Yummy....but I was thinking of Tara more in silk, fancy princessy-type dresses.

hehe...thanks for all the really good speculations, watty! :-D

*********************************************

xoxo
Emms
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Sat Dec 31, 2005 5:42 pm

Tara's in the next update...promise. :-D


All Disclaimers Apply

*******************************************************************************
Sheela pushed the wooden harvest-cart down the windblown dirt road toward Tarn; all the while, baby Willow stared impertinently up at her through red-mat bangs. The toddler sat nestled in blankets positioned around her like a nest, her round, green eyes, bird-like in the mid-morning sun.

Little Willow reminded Sheela of a bird, too. She was a frail little thing with twiggy legs and a thin stature. A strange sort of child she was, but Sheela had grown used to her, and even loved her in a way--not exactly in a maternal way, but as close to it as Sheela guessed she would get.

Sheela had dressed Willow that day in woolen knickers and a small button-down shirt, her red hair concealed under a boy’s cap. Sheela thought the baby looked smart, but hardly like the boy she’d been conditioned to be.

In fact it had been sheer luck up until that point that their farce hadn’t been found out. Sheela knew it was only because she kept strangers at a distance and her own family even further away, even going so far as to say the child was touched with leprosy and if anyone were to get close enough they’d be struck down with the dreaded disease as well.

She got the feeling though, that her father was close to solving the riddle of Willow’s hidden identity…he was always sniffing about trying to dig up dirt of one kind or another…it was really only a matter of time.

The cart hitched itself on some rock or other below its wheel, jarring Sheela into a sudden halt. She bent to pluck the obstruction from under the rusted, metal wheel.

The cart had been given to her by a group of itinerant workers, who’d traveled by the cottage earlier that week. The workers had been in search of wheat to harvest or fruits to pick, but finding neither at the humble cottage had settled for a hot meal and a dipper of water from the well. They had left the cart to Sheela as a thank you for sorts. Sheela was grateful to have it, too even if the iron wheels squeaked somewhat and could’ve use a good oiling.

Sheela righted herself just as she heard the approaching clatter of women. She saw that there were three women. She knew these women--not well, but as acquaintances; they were all wives of local business men in the area. When Ihram had been running for mayor the year before, Sheela had known these women in better detail--but now only saw them occasionally in town, or at church.

Sheela also saw that the women were dressed in shopping attire, the smocks on the front of their dressing gowns, crowded to the brim with delicious looking fruits and vegetables from the market. She could smell the cheeses they had wedged in between the apples baking thoroughly in the dry, afternoon sun.

“Good afternoon, Marm,” the first girl intoned cheerfully. Sheela couldn’t recall her name so instead of greeting her by name, Sheela simply nodded her head.

“Oh, is this the baby? We heard you’d birthed one. How was it?”

Sheela sneered, wondering at the second woman’s nerve for asking such a personal question. “It was tolerable.” She wouldn’t elaborate.

“I don’t think I could ever do anything like that…” the first one intoned grandly, jutting her hip out to accent the curve of her body. Sheela looked away, embarrassed by such a show. She didn’t hold back a sniff of disapproval at the woman either. Ihram was no longer a candidate for any offices so she owed these women nothing in the way of falsity.

“He’ll fetch a good price,” the third woman, who’d been silent until that point said as if to make up for her friends flip comment.

“I don’t know, he is kind of scrawny. I thought boys were supposed to be bigger…are you sure he’s in good health, Marm?”

Sheela forced herself to maintain her ground when she would have hauled off and hit the woman right in the face. “How dare she belittle the way I take care of the brat!” Sheela thought, but remained stoic.

“What did you say his name was?” the first woman continued, stretching her long finger out as if she might touch the baby’s cheek.

“I didn’t,” Sheela said tartly, already too through with this interaction. But the first woman prattled on unaffected by Sheela’s cold demeanor.

“You know what I heard?” The woman didn’t wait for a response, either from Sheela or her own traveling buddies before continuing her speech. “I heard they’re allowing babies to be kept, over in New Brighton.”

There was a wave of chatter that proceeded that announcement as the girls latched onto the first woman’s comment, all with comments of their own.

“I didn’t hear that, Gert,” the second woman said.

“Me either,” the third woman chimed in.

But Sheela was no longer paying attention to their conversation, she had withdrawn into her own mind as she considered the notion of keeping her own child. It was almost Little Willow’s time to be sold and Sheela had never let herself imagine that a heavier hand might intercede, changing the fate of her circumstance. What if what the first woman--Gert, Sheela recalled--was right? What if they were allowing babies over in New Brighten?-- which was a township not too far from Tarn. If that were the case would it be too long before Tarn adopted such a way of thinking?

Sheela bid the women good-day, then turning around---her plans in town forgotten--headed for home. She had a lot to think about.

[center]*************************************************[/center]

In the years following, the political climate in Tarn began its change. The New Radicals, as they were now called had impregnated the Townships around Tarn and Blackfoot with their new age philosophies and moral standards. Children were no longer in short demand or short supply. In fact there was a boom in births and more parents were making the choice to keep their babies as opposed to setting them on the auction block for a few dollars here or a few dollars there when times were hard.

The mandated selling of boys was almost completely done away with, save for the odd black-market auctions that took place behind stuffy high-class parlors. Or the less rare private sales, which had yet to be banned completely.

Willow’s father had lost the election the year of Willow’s birth and each year since, sending their family--if it could be called that, deeply into the realm of the lower-class by the time Willow was in her third year. Money was in short supply in those days, which forced Willow’s mother to go out looking for work.

When Willow wasn’t being ignored by her Father she was being ignored by her mother who’d taken to drinking large quantities of ale and other hard liquors when she wasn‘t plucking feathers in New Brighton at the feather factory. The only person who really seemed to take any interest in the small child was her grandfather, who by that time was bedridden and half way out of his mind.

Grampy Ick, as Willow called him on good days, and plain old Icky, under her breath when he was in a particularly fowl mood had stumbled upon the closely guarded secret of Willow’s birth a few years past and had been doing everything in his power to bring that information to light. He scared Willow most of the time--when he wasn’t sleeping, telling her of the things that would happen to her if he ever got anyone to listen to him. He’d told her that they would take her to the river and throw her in. Willow was terrified of that happening so subsequently she chose to keep her distance both from the river and her grandfather, when she could help it.

Fortunately Grampy Ick was in such a sorrowful state of health no one seemed to take him too seriously, and dismissed all of his claims against little Willow as a side effect of the dementia they claimed he suffered.

Willow was only five years old when, seeing the imprudence of her family, decided to leave.

She bundled her belongings together, into a burlap sack, tied her worldly possessions, which consisted of two pairs of long pants, one ratted, white canvas shirt and a stuffed tiger named Tiger with a string. She slung the whole contraption across her back and set off toward the blue-orange sky that was lit in the distance. She knew there was something better out there, if only she could find a way to get to it.

The dusty landscape loomed ahead of Willow as hawks circled overhead casting eerie shadows in the spaces between her steps. It was growing dark and the night-time creatures were starting to make ghastly noises in the distance and she was beginning to feel hungry.

The only provisions Willow had brought with her were a loaf of bread scavenged from her parents pantry and a canning jar of rain water she’d collected the day before. And as she walked it became apparent that her well thought out plan hadn’t been as thought out as she’d first surmised.

She was getting scared, more and more so the later it grew. Pinpoints of shiny yellow light dotted the foliage to her left and things howled in the distance to her right. She could feel her chin begin to quiver, but steadied herself against those girlish tendencies. She was a boy, after all, not some sniveling snippet of a thing--at least that’s what she told herself, fore she new too well that she was indeed a sniveling snippet of a thing…only this didn’t seem like a wise time for her to come to terms with that bit of inner revelation. So she steadied herself ever-the-more and proceeded onward right into the heart of the shiny, howling beasts. She would use her head to get out of this--she had a good one after all. At least it wasn’t nearly as misshapen as Grampy Icks' was.

TBC
Last edited by Emms on Sun Jan 01, 2006 12:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby tarebear » Sun Jan 01, 2006 4:56 am

I'M FIRST... I'M FIRST.... wow this hasn't happened in a while (being the first to make with the feedback i mean)... so yey!

what a way to open the new year! an update from one of my favorite authors! i'm a little rusty with the feedback so bear with me.

so, years have passed and a lot has changed... the New Radicals have brought in new philosophies and moral standards... children are no longer being drowned or sold... in the household though, ihram lost in every election and money has become tight so even sheela has to go out and work... sheela has taken to drinking ale maybe to drown out some of strain away... grampy ick had learned about willow's true identity but by then he was in poor health and thought he was suffering from dementia... this is the situation little willow grew up in... no wonder she wanted to get away.

Willow was only five years old when, seeing the imprudence of her family, decided to leave.


so brave of her to do so... i remember being scared of going to the bathroom alone after dark at her age let alone running away from home... she has a mind to get scared, but she also knows she's intelligent and she can get herself out of trouble.

so, here is where the true adventure for willow begins and i can't wait to read on what this adventure will be... and you promised tara on the next update, so can't wait for that as well...

oh, i have to mention that sheela had me laughing here:

she kept strangers at a distance and her own family even further away, even going so far as to say the child was touched with leprosy and if anyone were to get close enough they’d be struck down with the dreaded disease as well.


and everybody bought that? :lol :lol

good job with this update... can't wait for the next one!

happy new year!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby AlysonGoddess » Sun Jan 01, 2006 12:30 pm

hey great update!!! I cant wait till tara comes in the picture hmm i wonder whats gunna happen please update soon i hope you have a great new yr!
Happy New Years!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby kindagay » Mon Jan 02, 2006 12:51 pm

Update! Yay! :D :bounce :party :dance :applause :)

Aaaaand....... I'm calm again. :D

Hi Emms, :wave

Okay, my fb is a little delayed, 'cos I was in the middle of typing it out last night & my comp decided to crash, so I lost everything I'd typed - stupid computer :crash. But I'm pretty sure I remember what I'd typed so, hopefully, I'll actually get to post it this time. :)

Emms, sweetie, I'm left more & more intrigued with every wonderful update of this fic, it's quite brilliant, & so very cleverly written. :clap

So, Willow was raised as a boy (well, for her first 5 years anyway) - A-ha! I knew it! :glasses
I am glad that Sheela got to keep Willow, 'cos if she'd been sold it would have been off to the river with her, & that would have been very bad. I'm also glad, for the same reason, that "Grampy Ick" (:rofl) was never taken seriously.

I'm rather disappointed that Sheela took to ignoring Willow, I felt sure that she would grow to love her, especially as she had felt so defensive when her parenting skills had been questioned.

Poor Willow really did have a tough home life if, aged only 5, she's decided that she'll be better off running away. :aww
So, does she meet Tara whilst she's on the run? Is Tara running away too? Was Tara also raised as a boy? Or did the town she was born in not have a 'drown all girls' policy? :hmm

I think I ask far too many questions in my feedbacks for this fic. :)

I found this
her mother who’d taken to drinking large quantities of ale and other hard liquors when she wasn‘t plucking feathers in New Brighton at the feather factory
rather amusing. Just, feather plucking, it's funny :lol Well, it made me chuckle anyway. :blush

The first section of that update, specifically this paragraph
Sheela also saw that the women were dressed in shopping attire, the smocks on the front of their dressing gowns, crowded to the brim with delicious looking fruits and vegetables from the market. She could smell the cheeses they had wedged in between the apples baking thoroughly in the dry, afternoon sun.
reminded me of Margaret Atwood's Handmaid's Tale. I'm not sure why, maybe 'cos of the "shopping attire", & the whole, baby obsession.

That last part was absolutely wonderful, I'd quote the best bits, but that would be the entire last 3 paragraphs, which seems like rather a lot to quote. :) It was beautifully, wonderfully, magically written & I absolutely adored it. :clap :bow

Okay, I think that covered just about everything.
Thank you lots for the update sweetie. :)

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Jeanne
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby FineyMcFine » Tue Jan 03, 2006 11:54 am

Emms, this is very intriguing! Ah, you said Tara was in the NEXT update, not the one that I just read. Wow. This world is very interesting - I have a bit of handle on it, but it seems like you're fleshing it out bit by bit. I'm gathering that the selling of children is more for economic reasons rather than something everyone does. Seems like it would doom a community to extinction if they sold all their children.

I do love the "Willow as a boy" premise - I'm a bit of a sucker for the whole "incognito" thing.

Seems like Sheela did the best she could in keeping Willow alive for a time. Too bad she had to turn to the bottle later in life. Oh well. Looking forward to more!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby JustSkipIt » Tue Jan 03, 2006 2:00 pm

Hey Emms,
What a painful and heart-wrenching start. Willow setting out as a 5 year old boy? seems quite young but it's not the same world we live in. I'm hoping she'll be ok (or as ok as she'll be anyway). Interesting that she actually think she is a boy. More?
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Artemis » Thu Jan 05, 2006 10:15 am

Wow, cruel world indeed. And presented so well - I found a kind of black humour kept coming through as I read, which strangely makes the harshness of Willow's early life all the more real, by not consciously drawing attention to it. I really got a strong feeling of 'this is how life is' for this society, and how they truly didn't see the nastiness of their ways.

Something that really leapt out at me, whether by your design or just by chance, was Willow's stuffed tiger, Tiger. Just that, her having this toy tiger, and calling it something so simple as 'Tiger', really brought home to me how young she is, how sad it is that she's unloved, and how brave she is to set out on her own. And yes, it may be equal parts optimism and ignorance of the wider world, but she's taken the first step in making her life hers.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby bluewillowwitch » Mon Jan 09, 2006 4:56 am

Hey :flower ,

I can't wait to see where you take this fic. It is so good so far. Little Willow is running away from home. I wonder if she actually makes it far or if her mother is going to find her. ai wonder if she lets people know she is a girl?
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Darth Pacula » Sat Feb 11, 2006 2:58 pm

G'day, Emms. (aka the author previously known as Miss Kitty's Ball o' Yarn, and blimey that is a mouthful :-D )

Well, there's only three chapters to this story so far, (and Tara hasn't even made an appearance yet) but that just meant there was less for me to read to catch up.

Even in just those three chapters, you've painted an interesting world for our heroines. I know that Watson already mentioned a kind of Oriental feeling, but I think it's also a bit Dickensian, what with children being sold, and work houses/feather plucking factories. I also know that you yourself said you're basically coming up with this worlds details as you go along, but what you've got so far has peaked my interest.

The details behind this policy of drowning girl-childes and selling the boys are intriguing me, even if it seems to be a practice that is less common by the third chapter. If their children were being sold simply for monetary gain, why drown the girls then? What made them intrinsically worthless? And what's with that comment about children being in short supply, even in past tense? :hmm So many questions.

Now though, a five year old Willow is wandering out into the cold, cruel night, all alone. The sad thing is, there's a chance no-one in her family might even notice, or even care that she's gone.

I'd love to see this one continue, Emms.

Cheers,
Paul.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Thu Mar 02, 2006 3:08 pm

Goodness, it seems as if I've been away from this story for quite some time. Well, for those of you reading; fear not, young ones, I am working on a longish chapter for postage in the next few days.

There will be princesses, daring sword fights, Willows in disguise (no wait...that sounds like something else....) Okay, no sword fights...well, possibly a sword fight.

xoxo
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Willow Watcher » Thu Mar 02, 2006 8:31 pm

:bounce Great start! I love it! More soon please!
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby Emms » Thu Mar 02, 2006 10:11 pm

Hi everyone! Here's the update. I'll get replies posted for the last chapter on Saturday. I still have a little write left in me so I'm gonna use this energy to go on over and finish up the update for YMMS. I hope ya'll don't mind. :-D

[center]Image[/center]

All Disclaimers Apply

Chapter Four:

Rainbow Scooter pedaled the modified bicycle he’d fashioned out of wood and rusted iron. It had a flat tire, and the metal rim of the deflated wheel made a grating sound as it crushed dirt and brittle pebbles beneath its weight. It wasn’t beautiful, but it got him where he needed to go.

He was a vagabond--a drifter who earned each meal by trading anything he could find along his route. What society called an honest man’s work was as unattainable to him as a job in a slaughter house would be for a man with a queasy stomach. He wasn’t as agile as he had been, either. His knee was messed up from an accident he’d had when he was younger…because of it, his right leg was three inches shorter than his left which caused him to limp terribly and made traversing back and forth between Blackfoot and the outer edges of Medlehook agonizingly slow on foot.

Age had done a job on him as well, making him hardened, weathered and not much to look at. His long grey hair was wet and tangled in places that hadn’t seen a comb in years. His hair hung in his face in greasy streaks were it wasn‘t matted into thick dreadlocks, darker in places where the rain ran in rivets down its length.

Rainbow’s bags, slung across the pole anchored at his back, made a noise akin to the sound of keys jangling, as the cart lumbered forward up a slight embankment. He grunted with the effort that took and slowed to a stop once he’d cleared the incline.

Around him, the forest was abuzz with life. Hoot owls screeched to their prey and small rodents scurried through the rain-soaked leaves in search for a safe hiding place. The fallen branches and drenched vegetation splashed and smattered with the sound of larger animals searching for food.

It was unusually dark for that time of year which made it necessary to squint, not only through the onslaught of raindrops, but through the inky purple of approaching dusk as well.

The rain had started little over an hour ago and had drenched him clean through his layered clothing in a matter of minutes. He was a sight, that was for sure; wet as a drowned cat, and cold too. Rainbow figured he’d be a slight better off finding some shelter, makeshift or otherwise, to wait out the impromptu storm.

It was in that moment of silence while he plotted his next move that Rainbow Scooter thought he’d heard the sound of a whimpering kitten.

************************************************************************
Willow sat huddled underneath the bracken-berry bushes she’d come across moments after the rain began to pour. A newt starred at her where it sat next to her feet, his tongue flicked out, and it licked a fleck from it’s eye.

Willow stared into the red eyes of the slimy creature, her heart beating so fast in her chest that it vibrated like a drum beat in staccato rhythms while her chest rose and fell in quick, staggered breaths. She wanted to go home. For the first time in her life she ached for the tiny cot in the corner of the kitchen where she slept each night with Tiger clutched to her chest under the scratchy woolen blanket her mother had given her.

Even though she was young in age, Willow had an innate ability to think on her feet. She closed her eyes and leaving thoughts of warm cots and Tiger behind, began a more serious process of thinking, structured around her current situation.

She decided fairly quickly that she had indeed made a very hairy mistake by coming out there in the first place. She was scared, hungry, and now, thanks to the rain; she was wet and cold as well.

Willow held her knees to her chest while the rain dripped melodies onto her red hair, darkening it to an almost auburn. She’d wait out the storm and when it cleared she’d trudge back the way she’d come. She doubted she’d be in trouble. She doubted anyone knew she was gone.

************************************************************************
As he continued along, searching out the sound that still tinkled in the air like a tiny wind chime on a breezy day, Rainbow’s eye came to rest on a soggy lump on the ground. In the narrow place where the briar bracken bushes tangled over the pass, in a mass of overgrowth was a mangy stuffed tiger.

The rain was pelting the ground now and the tiny ice missiles that had formed inside the cloud led the assault, biting into Rainbow’s wrinkled skin with sharp pinpricks of pain. Hail. He hated hail.

Rainbow bent to retrieve the soaked toy from the downpour, but before his hand could make contact with the soggy creature, a small hand no bigger than the inside of his palm, slithered out from a space between the prickly vines, snatching the toy out of his reach.

Rainbow pulled his hand away, surprised by the movement, but soon found his palm inching forward once more along the slimy ground once he realized that the creature-hand was not going to slither out from its hiding place again.

He got down on his knees and lifted one of the vines so that he could get a better look into the wet and darkened chamber of prickly bush. He could see the small hand attached to the creature’s arm was freckled as if it had been dusted with a powder-- But was it really some creature? A memory surfaced in Rainbow’s weathered mind. Once there was a child…“Who’s there?” Rainbow said gruffly; angry that he should be made to remember things better left buried.

Still, he tried to keep his voice from sounding stern. He knew how children could be…a long time ago, he’d had one of his own… but that had been before the prohibition. Rainbow thought upon his lost daughter for only a moment, yet it was enough time to feel tears distinguishing themselves from the rain that poured down his cheeks to mix together with the tears.

“Don’t cry.”

Came the impish remark from the child-thing who was still tucked away under the bushes.

“I’m not crying; I’m shivering. It’s cold.” Rainbow could see the green eyes of the child glinting through the dim light, the same as a cat’s would do.

He was surprised that the child had braved it’s own safety to voice itself. For all the child knew he could have been there to do it harm. “I’m not the only one who’s cold. don’t you have an overcoat?” Rainbow could see the small wisp of the child through the tangled branches and it was shivering, too.

The child shook its head.

“Why are you out here by yourself?”

“I’m lost…”

Rainbow could tell the child was lying. “No you’re not. There’s not a farm around for miles. You’ve not wondered here by accident.” Rainbow squinted his eyes at the raggedy child. “You’ve been left out here haven’t you? Isn’t that what happened? Didn‘t they leave you out here?”

“Who, sir?”

“Your parents! Did they bring you out here to starve?” Rainbow hadn’t meant to snap at the child and instantly softened his expression but the child said nothing. Only its chin quivered as if it might burst into tears at any moment. Rainbow, again felt guilty for having been so harsh. It had been quite some time since he’d had much cause to look after a child of any kind.

“I’m not lost, and I haven’t been left here. I’ve run away.”

The child’s chin recovered from its quiver only to be stuck out defiantly toward Rainbow.

He could see more of the child now, for, in its anger it had moved boldly toward a widened space in the bushes. He could make out the child‘s short haircut and torn trousers. “You are a stupid boy. Did you know that?”

“I’m not stupid. I’m an adventurer…er”

The child seem puzzled by such a wordy pronunciation and had added an extra “er“ for good measure. “You’re a nitwit is what you are and I don’t want to hear another word against it.” Rainbow’s brows bent as he continued. “How far did you think you would get in a long shirt and pants as your only protection against the elements?”

“Blackfoot.”

Rainbow laughed heartily, his gruffness stalled for the moment. “Blackfoot is thirty miles away from here, child. I doubt you could get that far on those.” Rainbow pointed toward the child’s warn baby-hard-bottom shoes. The shoes were a shade of dingy black, but he suspected they once had been white.

“I can walk farther than that.”

Rainbow laughed again. “I’m sure you could…but Blackfoot is in the other direction.”

***********************************************************************
At the same time, over seven hundred miles east of the place the small girl who’d been raised as a boy, and the soiled old man stood getting to know each other, Elspeth MacLean, who preferred to be called Elsie, and her two children were setting off toward Blackfoot in horse and carriage.

MacLean was Elsie’s married name which she took no liking to it either. And if the truth be told, she hated everything about her husband and her life as an aristocrat. She hated everything, save for her children, who were the only bright spots in her whole God forsaken existence.

Her husband DonAldo, had sent word that she and the children should start the trip to Blackfoot that very day, so she had packed up the children and a few supplies into the white and gold carved carriage and bid their old life goodbye. She and the children would join DonAldo at their new estate, within the next few weeks. Elsie didn’t know how long it would take to get there as this was her first of such trips, but she didn’t suspect that it would take more than a few weeks of steady travel. They would stay at inns during the night, and during the day they would traverse the wild terrain between the two territories.

Her husband was a savage business man who’d bought his first plot of land at the age of 17 for a meager three dollars. That plot of land; his own mother’s grave--which he later sold, after removing the gravestone, to an old man for the price of 15 dollars and a chicken, which, she was told, had been quite a sum in those days.

DonAldo’s savagery wasn’t limited to the bank either, it was Elsie’s woe that he often struck her in secret, when irritated. Elsie wished she could leave…but there was no recourse for such things at the time, not to mention the fact that she had two small children to think of. Their well-being was more important to Elsie than her own happiness, and DonAldo had never so much lifted a hand to strike either child. She was glad for that…small miracles seemed less and less in those days…still she couldn’t help but worry about what would happen if someday DonAldo’s temper got the better of him and he tried to take his assault out on the children. What was worse was that Elsie wondered if she would be so battered by then that she might not do anything to stop him.

She was subservient by nature but had grown even more with every year she spent under DonAldo, and new enough to keep her lips sealed on topics she could not speak eloquently on; such as regional politics and religion. In private, she had her opinions on both subjects, but it was neither tasteful or wise to speak of such things in polite society. Her husband agreed. And she found life less complicated when she quickly deduced her husband’s thoughts on things and duplicated his sentiment. There was less trouble for her that way.

Elsie had been raised in a bare-foot liberal compound and was the wealthy heiress to her father’s fortune-- but had only faint glimmers of memories of her father…she’d been told that he had died when she was quite young, but since no proof had ever been shown in the case of her father’s death, she could not collect the large sum of money that awaited her.

Elsie still had nightmares of the dark and stormy night she’d been taken away, wrapped in a quilt her mother had made her, by people with hard hands and glassy stares. She could remember her mother crying at the window and struggling to get free from captures that had been invisible to Elsie’s eyes at the time. She thought about her own mother often, and wondered about what had become of her.

The cab hit a dip in the road, clearing Elsie’s head. She looked down at her daughter, who was watching her curiously.

As they headed west away from Wickshire, Elsie MacLean and her two children sat quietly. The was an air of thoughtfulness in the air as they traveled away from what had been their home for the last four years. The tallest towers of the castle’s stone exterior seemed to wave to them, while the shorter towers looked as if they might bow at the waist if not for the problem of their own immobility. Her two children had been borne behind those stone walls and wooden doors. She truly loved that house and was woeful to leave it behind.

But new destinies lay beyond the orange horizon…a new home. A new life


TBC
Last edited by Emms on Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:53 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: The Butterfly Palace

Postby kindagay » Fri Mar 03, 2006 5:09 am

DIBS! :bounce

------------------------------------

Hi sweetie :wave

& may I start with a Wow! :bow That was wonderful Emms, truly fantabulous - it's a word, well, no it's not really, but, it should be :D

I did suffer a brief moment of confusion after that opening sentence
Rainbow Scooter
sounds an awful lot like a gay muppet - is there any other kind? - I thought I'd stumbled across a Muppet Show crossover - now that's an interesting idea for a fic :lol

But then I read your description of Ranbow & figured out that he is not a muppet at all - or maybe he is, a really old, vagabond muppet :hmm
Okay, no more muppet talk, I promise. :|

So, I'm rather shocked, you've written a male character who actually sounds like he might be nice. Okay so, he's a little harsh, but, he sounds like he's had a hard life & he's not meaning to snap at poor little Willow.

Now, I'm wondering how old Rainbow is? I'm also wondering if his lost daughter happened to be called Elspeth? :hmm But I'm guessing that I'm gonna have to wait to find out the answer to that second question :sh

“Don’t cry.”
He was surprised that the child had braved it’s own safety to voice itself.
I love how caring Willow is, risking her saftey to comfort this complete stranger - so sweet. :)

“I’m not stupid. I’m an adventurer…er”
:lol So cute

Willow stared into the red eyes of the slimy creature, her heart beating so fast in her chest that it vibrated like a drum beat in staccato rhythms while her chest rose and fell in quick, staggered breaths. She wanted to go home. For the first time in her life she ached for the tiny cot in the corner of the kitchen where she slept each night with Tiger clutched to her chest under the scratchy woolen blanket her mother had given her.
Poor little Willow :aww - I called her that earlier too, I think that should be her new name for this fic - My heart broke for her when I read that, she's so scared. I just wanted to gather her up in a big warm blanket & take care of her. I'm glad that Rainbow found her, hopefully he can look after her now, although, living the life of a vagabond isn't really the best life for a little tot, but at least she won't have to fend for herself.

Oh, Tara's all aristocratic - I like that. It makes a nice change to see Tara being the one from the priviledged background & I'm glad she wasn't raised as a boy too - I can't imagine Tara all boy-ish.

I think it probably goes without saying that I don't like DonAldo, stupid man! But I am glad that he doesn't hit his children & I do hope that that won't change in the future. :paranoid

Elsie still had nightmares of the dark and stormy night she’d been taken away, wrapped in a quilt her mother had made her, by people with hard hands and glassy stares. She could remember her mother crying at the window and struggling to get free from captures that had been invisible to Elsie’s eyes at the time. She thought about her own mother often, and wondered about what had become of her.
Has anyone in this story had a pleasant, or even, just a not horrible, life? Poor Elsie, I'm not surprised that she's subservient.
Will we find out who those captors were? Will we find out what did become of Elsie's mother?
Will I ever stop asking so many questions in my feedbacks for this fic? :lol
But really, questions are good, it means that I'm desperately eager to read more :)

The was an air of thoughtfulness in the air as they traveled away from what had been their home for the last four years.
Her two children had been borne behind those stone walls and wooden doors.

How old is Tara exactly? I'm assuming that she's the youngest? So, if that was their home for 4 years, & both children were born there, Tara can't be more than 3 years old? :hmm

Well, I've ran out of update to talk about, so, I guess I'll be stopping now. :)

Just one more thing...
I'll get replies posted for the last chapter on Saturday. I still have a little write left in me so I'm gonna use this energy to go on over and finish up the update for YMMS. I hope ya'll don't mind
Why on Earth would we mind sweetie? We're getting wonderful updates to your fabulous stories, I can't imagine we'd ever complain about that :)

Again, I want to say thank you so much for sharing this tale with us sweetie, it makes me tingle with intrigue & interest. :)

Hugs
Jeanne
Last edited by kindagay on Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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