- Messages
- 16
- Wand
- Purpleheart Wood, 13' ¼" Essence of Fairy Dust
Talia finished pulling her hair up into a tight bun. She knew he would be here at any minute, and though they had been dating for seven months, now, she still spent just as many hours readying herself for each individual date. It was not easy keeping contact when the distance was so great, but he wrote so frequently that Talia hardly felt they had ever parted. It was their meeting at the wedding that had first brought the couple to meet, and while they had only remained friends for so long, the feelings Talia had towards him had changed drastically. It was her suggestion they become an item, a suggestion of which the young man in question seemed only too pleased to accept.
And now he was at the front door.
Talia gasped, tugging on her shoes and wiping off the excess lipstick from her face. She hurried downstairs, hearing her parents shouting something to her, which she ignored. As usual. Her elegant hand fell to the knob of the front door, twisting it and welcoming her visitor with a peck on the lips. Her father shouted something. Talia rolled her eyes. "Au revoir, papa," she called out in her airy french tone, before shuffling out the front door, slipping back inside only too snatch up her coat.
The room bustled with other young men and women, drinks in their hands, dressed to dance. Talia stood, a drink poised and ready in one hand, Zdravko's hand in the other. "It is good that France is open to other people," Talia commented in her tatters of English she had been forced to learn to fully communicate with Zdravko. She still spoke French around her own friends, however, mostly to annoy him. "That man looks lost." She added, gesturing to a young man only a few years her senior at most, his eyes roaming the room for someone to talk to. He was obviously foreign. Obviously.
"Christelle will be here. I hope." Talia heaved a sigh. Her elder sister, master example of a daughter, high grades, blonde hair, pretty and full of bright ideas, had been traveling since she had finished at school. The years had swooped by with only passing glimpses of her when she came to visit during the New Year. "She was in Egypt when she wrote."
And now he was at the front door.
Talia gasped, tugging on her shoes and wiping off the excess lipstick from her face. She hurried downstairs, hearing her parents shouting something to her, which she ignored. As usual. Her elegant hand fell to the knob of the front door, twisting it and welcoming her visitor with a peck on the lips. Her father shouted something. Talia rolled her eyes. "Au revoir, papa," she called out in her airy french tone, before shuffling out the front door, slipping back inside only too snatch up her coat.
The room bustled with other young men and women, drinks in their hands, dressed to dance. Talia stood, a drink poised and ready in one hand, Zdravko's hand in the other. "It is good that France is open to other people," Talia commented in her tatters of English she had been forced to learn to fully communicate with Zdravko. She still spoke French around her own friends, however, mostly to annoy him. "That man looks lost." She added, gesturing to a young man only a few years her senior at most, his eyes roaming the room for someone to talk to. He was obviously foreign. Obviously.
"Christelle will be here. I hope." Talia heaved a sigh. Her elder sister, master example of a daughter, high grades, blonde hair, pretty and full of bright ideas, had been traveling since she had finished at school. The years had swooped by with only passing glimpses of her when she came to visit during the New Year. "She was in Egypt when she wrote."