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Finding Star Part One (Final Revisions I Hope)
By Michelle R Kidwell Power In The Pen
Friday, July 06, 2012
Rated "PG13" by the Author.
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I would have cried out at the memory of some of the things, but I had numbed myself to those memories long ago.
 Chapter One:
The first time I met my family was at the airport. I was a stranger in this strange place, and these people were going to take me in as their own. America was like a dream.
The America my Father had told me about had been one of evil and infidels, but my father himself was evil. I had celebrated his death secretly, celebrated, when I had come home to be told he had been killed. I made the show of grieving but in my heart I felt nothing but relief.
I spent a year and a half in an orphanage in a small village outside of Kabul. The same village that had hid so many secrets, secrets about the things a monster was doing, and letting others do to his own daughter, but I was only a girl and in his eyes I did not matter. I was a piece of property.
I was treated worse than a piece of property I was treated like a piece of garbage by the very people who were supposed to love me. So when these strangers walked up to me with open arms I felt myself shaking. I was terrified, what if they really were monsters like my parents? What if they were only pretending?
I did not know these people yet, and already they were wanting to give me hugs. I thought how strange is it in America you hug even strangers?
I was not a stranger in their mind though, they had been working for a year to bring me to America, not an easy thing for a Christian family to take in a child from a Muslim world. I knew nothing of what to expect and neither did they, we were strangers to each others beliefs, but the truth was I was not even sure what I believed.
Certainly not in the Allah my Father spoke of, the one who was so full of evil and violence. The one who said it was okay for a Father to do horrible things to his child.
I would have cried out at the memory of some of the things, but I had numbed myself to those memories long ago.
I stood in the corner, as these blonde hair, blue eyed strangers came up to me. I spoke their language, because I had learned to do so in the Orphanage, but I did not understand their customs. I did not understand their ways.
My skin was darker browned by the sun, but they were white, like the Milk used in afternoon tea.
I knew they were my family now, that they had paid a lot of money to adopt me, that they were Christians who had one daughter, a daughter who was seventeen six years my senior, but I knew little else about them. And they knew only what the people at the adoption agency had told them, which was very little, because I did not speak of what happened to me.
If I told of the things that my Father had done to me, my brothers, the neighborhood boys as my family watched no one would ever want me. I would never get adopted, I would certainly never get married, so I kept my mouth shut.
I had learned long ago, that being silent licensed the pain some, the disappointment some.
What if they hurt me like my other family did?
What if I am going from one hell to another?
What if they really don’t want me? What if this is something they only felt they had to do because they felt bad?
~
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| Reviewed by Budd Nelson |
7/7/2012 |
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Michelle,
It is too bad so many have to start life this way. great story.
Budd |
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| Reviewed by Karen Lynn Vidra, The Texas Tornado |
7/7/2012 |
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Powerful beginning to a compelling story; very well penned, Michelle!
(((HUGS))) and much love, your friend in Texas, Karen Lynn. :) |
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