Code: Select all
Backdated — Winter 2018
On January 10th, 2016, Charlotte Taylor stepped into the then-unfinished Serpentine looking for a job.
Then she blinked, and two years had passed.
As the allurist stared down from the window of her barren kitchen, watching the snowfall, she caught a glimpse of her reflection in the glass. The features of her corpse were only partially visible and very familiar, but tonight it gave her pause. It wasn’t just the changes she herself had undergone during the last two years, but everything around her which had been altered. The world as she knew it had ended, on two occasions, and only now was she realising how different things truly were.
Charlie Fforde had found a new family, and a new name to match. A smile crossed her lips as she glanced down. The bangle Jesse had given her on Christmas Eve was significant. Beyond the artisan craftsmanship that made it so uniquely beautiful, it had been personalised and imbued with meaning. Running her thumb across the snake’s jewelled eyes, Charlie furrowed her brow.
Looking back was no habit of hers. Her past was something she had keenly turned her back on time and time again. Don’t look back, you’re not going that way. It was a quote she lived by. Yet, the distance spanned between where she’d been and where she now was, was extensive. Charlie had been so focused on seizing the day and working towards something – anything – that she’d denied herself the opportunity to make peace with so many moments that had shaken her to her very core. The woman she was today was not who she’d expected herself to become.
Sliding the bangle off her wrist and fidgeting with it, the allurist turned her back to the window and glanced about the room. Sharp eyes noticed the thin coat of dust gathered atop the marble countertops. Her gaze flitted about the kitchen before settling back onto the bangle. Holding it up at eye level for a brief moment, she read the inscription along the inside and smiled once more.
It was strange to think of Jesse outside of any particular context. He had taken on so many roles in her life that she struggled to cast him as an individual. Boss, friend, saviour, mentor, family. He was also a pain in the ***, but she couldn’t fault him for it given their similar temperaments. There was love there too, but an unfamiliar strain of it. Family and long-term friendships featured limitedly in her life up until Harper Rock, and he represented both. The realisation that this connection they shared was practically eternal triggered mild discomfort, too. Sire.
Charlie slipped the bangle back onto her wrist and pushed off the window. It was so easy for her to rely on him when confusion arose, but this wasn’t the kind of confusion someone else could abate. This medley of unfamiliar feelings was unprecedented and too peculiar even for herself to grasp, let alone be capable of describing it to another.
Reaching for her phone, the allurist sought out another confidant. It occurred to her as she scrolled through their latest exchange however, that if she couldn’t explain herself to Jesse, then she couldn’t begin to explain herself to Marisol. As close as the two women had gotten since her turning, there was still a lot the they hadn’t shared. Whatever it was that Charlie sought—answer, question, or advice, it required a bird’s eye view of her life, which neither Jesse nor Marisol had.
Whatever this was, it would pass, as all things did, and she decided to leave it at that. There was far too much to keep her busy what with rumours of a cure and Serpentine business. True to her nature, Charlie resisted the pull of the past and threw herself full-throttle into the present, unaware of the growing beast at the back of her mind.
[/size]Then she blinked, and two years had passed.
As the allurist stared down from the window of her barren kitchen, watching the snowfall, she caught a glimpse of her reflection in the glass. The features of her corpse were only partially visible and very familiar, but tonight it gave her pause. It wasn’t just the changes she herself had undergone during the last two years, but everything around her which had been altered. The world as she knew it had ended, on two occasions, and only now was she realising how different things truly were.
Charlie Fforde had found a new family, and a new name to match. A smile crossed her lips as she glanced down. The bangle Jesse had given her on Christmas Eve was significant. Beyond the artisan craftsmanship that made it so uniquely beautiful, it had been personalised and imbued with meaning. Running her thumb across the snake’s jewelled eyes, Charlie furrowed her brow.
Looking back was no habit of hers. Her past was something she had keenly turned her back on time and time again. Don’t look back, you’re not going that way. It was a quote she lived by. Yet, the distance spanned between where she’d been and where she now was, was extensive. Charlie had been so focused on seizing the day and working towards something – anything – that she’d denied herself the opportunity to make peace with so many moments that had shaken her to her very core. The woman she was today was not who she’d expected herself to become.
Sliding the bangle off her wrist and fidgeting with it, the allurist turned her back to the window and glanced about the room. Sharp eyes noticed the thin coat of dust gathered atop the marble countertops. Her gaze flitted about the kitchen before settling back onto the bangle. Holding it up at eye level for a brief moment, she read the inscription along the inside and smiled once more.
It was strange to think of Jesse outside of any particular context. He had taken on so many roles in her life that she struggled to cast him as an individual. Boss, friend, saviour, mentor, family. He was also a pain in the ***, but she couldn’t fault him for it given their similar temperaments. There was love there too, but an unfamiliar strain of it. Family and long-term friendships featured limitedly in her life up until Harper Rock, and he represented both. The realisation that this connection they shared was practically eternal triggered mild discomfort, too. Sire.
Charlie slipped the bangle back onto her wrist and pushed off the window. It was so easy for her to rely on him when confusion arose, but this wasn’t the kind of confusion someone else could abate. This medley of unfamiliar feelings was unprecedented and too peculiar even for herself to grasp, let alone be capable of describing it to another.
Reaching for her phone, the allurist sought out another confidant. It occurred to her as she scrolled through their latest exchange however, that if she couldn’t explain herself to Jesse, then she couldn’t begin to explain herself to Marisol. As close as the two women had gotten since her turning, there was still a lot the they hadn’t shared. Whatever it was that Charlie sought—answer, question, or advice, it required a bird’s eye view of her life, which neither Jesse nor Marisol had.
Whatever this was, it would pass, as all things did, and she decided to leave it at that. There was far too much to keep her busy what with rumours of a cure and Serpentine business. True to her nature, Charlie resisted the pull of the past and threw herself full-throttle into the present, unaware of the growing beast at the back of her mind.