Author's note: Thank you for your reviews. I'm terribly sorry about the delay on both stories.
Chapter 2: Lost and Confused Emilia woke
suddenly from a nightmare and rubbed her head. It was killing her and
she felt like she'd throw up if she had to move. "Where am I?"
she asked no one. She no longer felt the humidity of the woods or the
hard rock she remembered.
"Oh good, you're awake," she
heard someone with a southern accent say, "I thought you'd never
wake up." After a few minutes of Emilia gaping at the girl, she
said, "I guess you'll be wantin' yer privacy than. Just find me
if you need anything, hon." Emilia just sat there and
watched the girl leave, her curly red hair bouncing with every step.
Everything seemed so happy here, but Emilia still had a strange
feeling. She was still lost and confused. She finally decided to get
out of the bed she was in and look around as an attempt to figure out
where she was. She walked to what she hoped was a bathroom and, sure
enough, it was. Emilia stared at herself in the mirror after
splashing some water on her face. But it wasn't herself. She felt
as if she was staring at a stranger in that mirror. Her once soft,
shiny, and curly hair now lay limp and lifeless around her shoulders.
Her once tan and beautiful skin was pale and scarred. Her arms were
bruised and scratched from the tree and she felt even worse than she
looked. "Where am I?" she asked frantically, remembering
that she was lost. She splashed more water on her face and walked
back into the room she woke up in. Emilia walked up to the window
that she saw her car out of and pushed the sunflower curtains that
matched everything else in the room all the way back. There was
nothing but a parking lot and a field of flowers and other small
plants.
After finally
regaining sight, she realized that she was no longer near her home or
anything that resembled her little town. The only thing she
recognized was the car she saw out of the window that sat to her
right. "I thought I left that at the gas station," she said
aloud, again, to no one.
She walked down a
narrow, wooden staircase that was possibly the only part of the whole
building that was even slightly dark. She decided to ask the woman
where exactly she was. The kitchen was just as cheerful as the bed
room. It was covered in rooster-patterned items that ranged from salt
and pepper shakers to curtains and table cloths. The sun shone
brightly through each window and everything smelles of cinnamon. She
found the lady talking to a cop and decided that she should lay low.
She walked through the kitchen and out the back door to find her face, the one she used to have, on the front of the newspaper. They hadn't read it yet. She grabbed the paper and threw it into the garbage, hoping the lady wouldn't find it. She couldn't leave just yet. She walked back up to the bedroom and fell asleep immediately.