[[Ok, so before i dive into this and post a ton of stuff, let me say this: I've never had any real training in writing, past high school English class. I do it because I enjoy it. I'm sure there will be grammatical errors... I'm dead certain of it in-fact. I would prefer if these were pointed out in a pm rather than on this thread. I say this because it's happened to me before. I posted a story and someone copied it, pointing out every single error of the story. *takes a deep breath* ok, here we go...This story can also be found .. And, as shouldn't have to be said, This entire thing is ©Jessica Gunn (me) ]]
Prologue
Cassandra was a girl, of no particular significance. She was raise with her mother and father, brother and sister in a house inside town. Her eyes were a bluish grey that never seemed to sparkle, her hair was a reddish-blonde, as if bleached by the sun, and her skin was pale, the only coloring to it, were the blotched freckles here and there.
She went to school, just like every other boy and girl her age, and got Bs and Cs, better than her brother, worse than her sister. Every day she would come home, do her chores, and then read a book, or something else equally, seemingly, boring.
But it was while she was reading these books, her nose buried deep within the text, that she truly became her own being.
Chapter One
Cassandra knew the owner of the bookstore by name, and was regularly found perusing through the books on the shelves. When new inventory came in, it was as if she got the pick of the litter, so to say, before any other customers got to see what was available.
On the first Saturday of the month, every month, Cassandra would take the books that she had gotten over the past month, and already read (which was usually all of them) and took them in to trade with the owner of said store. She treated the books as if the were made of gold, so the owner was always happy to trade with her, marking the books as used, but selling them for the same price they would be normally, as they were in such good condition, or perhaps a dollar or so off, depending on how many times the girl had read them over the past few weeks (though, to be honest, some of the books looked somehow better than they did when they arrived in the store).
It was upon one of these Saturdays that the story truly begins. Cassandra waited eagerly by the door of the bookstore. It was still very early morning, when most children would still be asleep, but Cassandra waited, bouncing on the balls of her feet, for the door to open. Watching the clock inside, she counted down the minutes; 5, 4, 3, 2, 30 seconds, 10 seconds. Right on time, as if an alarm would have gone off otherwise, the owner of the store opened the door, letting the eager girl into its confines.
“Don’t you ever sleep?” he asked, looking through his spectacles down towards her, noticing that she had grown.
“Mr. Thomas, If I was not here when you opened, how would I know that you were ok?” she asked, setting down the book bag full of books on a nearby counter. Cassandra had known Mr. Alan Thomas for as long as she could remember. He was her godfather, perhaps not by her mother’s choice, but her own. She thought of him as family and over the past few months had started to become a bit concerned when he slowly started to have a cough that seemed to never go away.
“Well, this is true” Mr. Thomas said, moving to the stool behind the counter to look over the books that she had returned and to scan them back into his computer so that they were back in the inventory. Looking up, he looked at Cassandra, browsing the table with the new books, the ever-so-rare sparkle present in her eyes.
Cassandra slowly passed by the books, looking at the three rows facing her, knowing that there were three more rows facing the other direction. Her hand lifted, running over the covers one by one, as if reading them from the outside, feeling for whether she would enjoy a book or not. This was a ritual she had every month, as the new books came in.
Time passed as the old books were scanned in, and the new books were meticulously looked over once, twice, three times. Something wasn’t right, Cassandra thought to herself, before moving back towards the counter, looking up at the elderly man who sat behind it, waiting to be called upon to help with something, or for a customer to come in and purchase or order a book. He smiled down at the girl who cocked her head to the side “Mr. Thomas,” she started, her brow furrowing as if something was terribly wrong “you’re missing one.” She said this, matter-of-factly, leaving no room for question.
“AH!” The older man said, a twinkle showing in his pale green eyes as he stood, his energy fooling any who might try and guess his age. “One came in that I wanted to keep especially for you.” He said, moving towards the back of the store.
Cassandra had been in the back once or twice, helping carry heavier boxes and other such things to help out after hours. Mr. Thomas had never had much problem with her, so he let her work around the store with him, doing little things of course: sweeping the entranceway of leaves in the fall; helping decorate for the winter festivals; putting up announcements for activities going on around the store. But this day seemed to be different. She had never gone back at the beginning of the day. The air smelled different, the normal dust having a rich smell to it almost, as if the entire room was hiding something from her.
Quietly she followed him to the farthest back room, the lighting minimal, a mere ceiling light above the small room. Mr. Thomas picked up a brown-paper wrapped package, sitting down on the stool it had been setting upon before he held out the package towards the girl, who stepped forward to take it from him. Slowly she turned the book over in her hands, the same examining look that she always gave new books. Slowly, as if scared it would jump out at her, she began to pull the twine that held the paper to the book, letting it fall around her supporting hand as she unwrapped the paper from the book.
The book itself looked old, many, many years old. The cover was a deep forest green with strange symbols that she didn’t recognize in a lighter almost ghostly green. The text upon the binding that pronounced its name was a golden color, its text, ‘The Beginning’.
Cassandra looked over the book laying the binding upon her hand as she slowly flipped open the first page, reveling in the crispness of the pages, every one edged in gold. The text was a beautiful scrawl, looking as if the book was written by hand, rather than printed on a press. She smiled as she read a few lines, already absorbed into its depth.
“For one to know the beginning, they must first look at what was before the beginning, and what the beginning is of. Before a child can be born, first a being must die. However, the beginning of all life is a far different story. Of this, we shall speak."
Cassandra looked up from the book, her eyes glittering like stars as they locked with Mr. Thomas’s. She smiled, brightly, as she moved towards him, slowly closing the book as if it were made of glass. “Thank you,” she said softly, moving to give the elderly man a huge hug.
Smiling, Mr. Thomas returned the hug, his green eyes closing as he took in a deep breath. As he exhaled, however, he began to cough, his hand holding onto Cassandra’s shoulder, as his other moved to his chest, his body bending in half.
“Mr. Thomas!” Cassandra called out, moving to him. She wrapped an arm around his frail body, helping him to his feet “We need to get you to fresh air!” she said, moving towards the front with him. It was a slow walk, for something that wasn’t very fall, the shuffled steps of an older man matching the more hurried, soft steps of the girl, her young form holding him up as best as she could.
After what seemed like hours, Cassandra got him to the front, sitting upon one of the reading chairs as she rushed to get him a glass of cool water to sip. Mr. Thomas’s eyes closed, his body lying in the chair, limp as he tried to breathe. Breaths seemed to resist him, each one more shallow and ragged than the one before it, until, almost just as Cassandra was returning, the breaths didn’t come any more.
Cassandra dropped the glass she held, barely hearing the shattering as it hit the carpeted floor. She rushed to the old man, but it was too late. The only person she had ever been able to confide in, was gone.