CHAPTER
ONE
There are two mirrors in my house. One of them is behind a sliding panel in the hallway downstairs- Everyone knows where that one is- and the other one is a secret mirror in my room behind a sliding door in my closet which I found when I was cleaning the closet when I was ten. No one knows where the one in my room is- except me.
Our faction allows us to look at a mirror on the third day of every second month, when my mother cuts my hair two inches.
I sit on a chair and my mom stands behind me with the scissors. A strand of dark blondy-brown hair falls to the ground.
When she finishes- about five to ten minutes later- she pulls my shoulder- length hair away from my face and twists it into a bun. I look at how calm and focused she looks. She is good at caring about other people instead of herself. I can’t say the same of myself at all.
When she isn’t paying attention to me I look at myself in the mirror. Not for vanity,- which is what I usually use the mirror in my room for- but I’m curious to see how shorter it looks from this morning. My hair isn’t that short since it used to go just under my breast but now it finishes on top.
This morning I looked at myself in the mirror in my closet- which I’m not supposed to do. In my reflection I see a small face, big, round blue eyes and a small thin nose. I look like a small girl even though I’m quite tall and I turned sixteen yesterday. The other factions celebrate birthdays but my faction, Abnegation, don’t. It would be selfish. Even though I am quite selfish by wanting to have a birthday party and everyday I secretly look in the mirror in my closet. When I’m not in my house I look at myself from the reflection of water and windows.
“There. All done.” My mother says as she pins the bun in place. She smiles and her eyes catch mine. I can’t look away now, it’s too late.
“Emmaline,”
“I know- don’t look in the mirror- I’m sorry.” I frown.
“It’s okay, I understand, it’s natural for you to do that.”
What does that mean? That she’s more self-less than me? Well, it’s true...
“So today is the day.” She says like the last thing we said to each other was never spoken.
“Yes...”
“Are you nervous?”
I stare into my blue eyes for a moment. Today is the day of the Aptitude test that will show me which of the five factions I belong in. And tomorow, at the Choosing Ceremony, I will decide on one; I will decide the rest of my life; I will decide to either stay with my family or abandon them.
“Um, no.” I’m terrified.
“Okay, can you please go get your sister?”
“Sure.” Just before I get up I look at mother. “Thank you. For cutting my hair.”
She kisses me and smiles. I walk to the door. “Emily! Can you come here for mom?”
A minute later my twin sister Emily runs down the stairs. Her pretty brownish-blond hair is down and goes to wear mine used to finish, before it got cut. We aren’t identical since instead of blue eyes like mine she has brown and our faces look a bit different. I smile and walk out to the dining room. I sit on a chair and clean the bench. It’s the only thing I can do. I can’t read because books aren’t allowed in Abnegation. Eight minutes later the door opens and my mother and twin come out.
“All finished now. Let’s go have breakfast.” I think my mother could be beautiful in a different world. Her body is thin beneath the gray robe. She has long eyelashes and when she lets her brown hair down at night it hangs in waves over her shoulders. But she has to hide that beauty in Abnegation.
We all walk together to the kitchen. At mornings my sister and younger brother Nathan make breakfast together, my father’s hand goes through my hair as he reads the newspaper and my mother hums as she cleans the dining table- It is when I feel guiltiest for wanting to leave them.
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Beating Heart: A Divergent Fanfiction
AdventureIn a world divided by factions based on virtues, 16 year old Emma Neville learns she's Divergent and doesn't fit in. When she discovers a plot to destroy Divergents, Emma, her twin sister Emily and the mysterious Four must stop the plot before it's...