A letter Will wrote to his parents, unsent and unfinished
Mother,
Father:
It’s my seventeenth birthday today. I know that
to write to you is to break the Law. I know that I will likely tear this letter
in pieces when it is finished, as I have done on all my birthdays past since I
was twelve. But I write anyway, to commemorate the occasion, the way some make
yearly pilgrimages to a grave to remember the death of a loved one. For are we
not dead to each other?
I wonder
if when you woke this morning, you remembered that today, seventeen years ago,
you had a son. I wonder if you think of me, and imagine my life, here in
the Institute in London. I doubt you could imagine it. It is so very different
from our house surrounded by mountains and the great, clear blue sky and the
endless green. Here everything is black and gray and brown, and the sunsets are
painted in smoke and blood.
I wonder if you worry that I am lonely, or as mother
always used to, that I am cold or that I have gone out in the rain again
without a hat. No one here worries about those details. There are so many
things that could kill us at any moment, catching a chill hardly seems
important.
I wonder
if you knew that I could hear you that day you came for me when I was
twelve. I crawled under the bed to block out the sound of you crying my name.
But I heard you. I heard mother call for her baby, her little one. I bit my
hands until they bled but I did not come down and eventually Charlotte
convinced you to go away. I thought you might come again but you never did.
Herondales are stubborn like that.
I remember the great sighs of relief you would
both give, each time the Council came to ask me if I wished to join the
Nephilim and leave my family, and each time I said no and sent them away. I
wonder if you knew I was tempted: by the idea of a life of glory, of
fighting and killing to protect as a man should. It is in our blood: the call
to seraph and stele, to Marks and to monsters.
I wonder why you left the
Nephilim, Father; I wonder why Mother chose not to Ascend and to become a
Shadowhunter. Is it because you found them cruel or cold? I have not found them
so. Charlotte especially is kind to me, little knowing how much I do not
deserve it. Henry is mad as a brush, but a good man: he would have made Ella
laugh. There is little good to be said about Jessamine, but she is harmless. As
little as there is good to say about her, there is as much good to say
about Jem—he is the brother Father always thought I should have, blood of my
blood, though we are no relation. Though I might have lost everything else, at
least I have gained one thing in his friendship. And we have a new addition to
our household, too. Her name is Tessa. A pretty name, is it not? When the
clouds used to roll over the mountains from the ocean—that gray is the color of
her eyes —
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