
Rebekah Elisabeth
Bio
Stories (10/0)
The Aegean Cat
Eleanor Sagona was a young woman of small stature, quick wit, and wild hair. She and her brother were forces of nature encased in soft flesh woven of sunlight and dark wheat. Lou thought they belonged in the countryside; they always smelled like open fields and wildflowers. It was one of the many oddities Lou had noticed since the siblings had appeared in her seventh hour gym class. The most notable of said oddities being that she could have sworn she’d never seen either of the siblings before 2:15 on November 4th but by all other’s accounts, the two had lived in Franklin all their lives. The second most notable of said oddities being that they were, in fact, forces of nature, in a town where Sunday papers were still delivered and a wild night meant there had been a six-pack of Bud Light present. And the third most notable of said oddities was that the pair did not receive the Sunday paper or participate in any aforementioned wild nights. As far as Lou could tell the siblings spent their time in one of three ways; attending school, walking to or from school, or quietly piddling away in their home (that only the two of them ever entered or exited) between school hours.
By Rebekah Elisabethabout a year ago in Fiction
Rose Murphy
Roisin Sinclair was beautiful, breathtakingly so, undeniably so. That is why the rumors began to spread. The tales of her unfortunate association with the sailor boy, Thomas Murphy, unchaperoned as it were, and his inevitable parting prior to any sort of ceremony or matrimony of any kind. Fair as she was, no opportunity to dissect her tragic fall from respectable society—and to tarnish her reputation—could be disregarded by the other young ladies of marrying age. The topic of her imminent spinsterhood was quite popular among high society.
By Rebekah Elisabethabout a year ago in Fiction