- Messages
- 13
- OOC First Name
- Anna
- Blood Status
- Mixed Blood
- Relationship Status
- Divorced
- Sexual Orientation
- Bisexual
- Age
- 29
It wasn't the snide looks and whispers among her peers that brought Sylvie Duval halfway across the world and to New Zealand of all places, although she had to admit the pressure and judgement over her situation hadn't lessened her motivation to leave. After all word traveled fast whenever a scandal was uncovered, and Sylvie knew all to well the affinity for gossip older women in her class habored to bring a sense of excitement to their mundane lives. But of course, that wasn't entirely why she found herself with little more than a charmed suitcase in tow and on her sister's doorstep that day. The gossip, she could handle, the anger festering within her like wildfire whenever she heard silences fall as she walked past cliques at parties, she could handle. Her true incentive to leave her life in France behind and arrive to her sisters home unannounced was instead the strongly worded letter from her parents only weeks after her divorce. It was inevitable word would reach her family sooner or later, Sylvie just hadn't expected it to do so, so promptly. The neatly written letter denoted her responsibilities as a Duval, outlined their ever present disappointment in her life choices and past decisions, and lacked sympathy for her desire for a fuller life. It was finalized with a sentence that was the metaphorical nail in her financial coffin. 'You are thereby, cut off'. That was the long and short of it, worded in her mother's all too typical formality after too many ultimatums for Sylvie to count.
Sacré bleu! Sylvie Duval seeks divorce, was all to juicy of a story she was happy to leave her parents to deal with with in France. The shame, she thought, the scandal. Unheard of for a woman of her age to marry young and realise midway through her twenties that her life was meant for more than marble floors and stone walls amounting to a prison where she would raise a family, that she was not living in the nineteenth century, and was instead entirely deserving of a life that meant more than what all of the women in her life had settled for. All of the other women except of course, for her sister Carine, who Sylvie without any other place to go was presently seeking solace in. Without hesitance or fear of being turned away, because Carine would never turn her away, would she? Sylvie placed her suitcase on the doorstep next to her, and knocked three times on the front door to Carine and Yves' home. She was wholly unsure of whether Carine would approve of the divorce, and therefore waited patiently for the door to be answered, bracing herself for whatever welcome she would be given.
Sacré bleu! Sylvie Duval seeks divorce, was all to juicy of a story she was happy to leave her parents to deal with with in France. The shame, she thought, the scandal. Unheard of for a woman of her age to marry young and realise midway through her twenties that her life was meant for more than marble floors and stone walls amounting to a prison where she would raise a family, that she was not living in the nineteenth century, and was instead entirely deserving of a life that meant more than what all of the women in her life had settled for. All of the other women except of course, for her sister Carine, who Sylvie without any other place to go was presently seeking solace in. Without hesitance or fear of being turned away, because Carine would never turn her away, would she? Sylvie placed her suitcase on the doorstep next to her, and knocked three times on the front door to Carine and Yves' home. She was wholly unsure of whether Carine would approve of the divorce, and therefore waited patiently for the door to be answered, bracing herself for whatever welcome she would be given.