"And this job of yours, will it make you more likeable?"
"No."
"Will it gain you a Royal status in the society?"
"No, Mother."
"Find a suitable husband for you?"
"No."
"Then, why exactly did you accept this job?"
I was tempted to say that it was the money, that it would provide me the freedom I lacked under her roof, but I couldn't dare, of course not.
My mother, Bathsheba, stared at me with her eyes narrowed, her hands on her narrow hips, her ruby red lips pursed in concentration and disgust. I stared at my fake rose studded sandals, not daring to look her in the eye.
When it came to dodging my mother at an argument, I'd grown into a pro over the years. There were just three steps, really.
1. Don't look her in the eye.
2. Answer with a simple 'Yes' or 'No', never speak more than those simple, little words. NEVER.
3. When everything else fails, run away, making sure to run in a zig zag manner to confuse the predator.
The third rule, I learned from National Geographic, in a documentary called 'what to do when hunted by an alligator.'
"Well?"
I decide to play it safe and remain silent.
"Ambrosia Bellemore." She says curtly, clicking her plain black heels with impatience.
"Well, mother, it felt like a great opportunity. And it was good, easy money." I finally blurt out.
The moment I utter easy and money together, my mother's eyelids start twitching incessantly. I gulp audibly.
"Easy money, you say? How easy exactly?" She asks with an evil smirk.
Oh my God, she thinks I'll sleep around to get money.
A flare of anger ignites inside me, a little part of me tries to extinguish it, but a larger part of me holds onto it until every part of me is seething and an angry red.
"I'll be working in a publishing company, mother." Barely holding on, I manage to spit the words through my teeth.
"You, young lady, have no control over yourself. I knew you'd grow up and follow your father's footsteps." I didn't expect it to be a compliment, not when my father had left her for another woman. I don't actually blame him though, I think he finally had had enough of zero fat breakfast, lunch and dinner.
"I'm not like him, mother. I just want to do whatever I want with my life!"
"Do what? Take a miserly job when you could've easily become a doctor, just like your sister and me?"
Before I could come up with a proper come back to that, the door to her room opens slightly. The narrow, bony face of my sister, a perfect replica of our mother's, peers in with barely concealed anger.
"You are fighting again?" She accuses my mother.
My mom runs a hand through her already perfect platinum hair. If I didn't know her better, I'd have said she looked almost sheepish.
"No. Just talking."
Neave eyes me strangely, and I give her an almost genuine looking smile. Her eyes narrow. She doesn't say anything though, and turns her attention back to mother.
YOU ARE READING
I Like Your Shoes | ✓
Humor"Sometimes, we are so smitten with happy endings, that we believe we'll end up with one too." Ambrosia Bellemore never believed in happy endings, even though the books she read said otherwise. The closest she ever came to magic was when she found th...