“Careless of her own life, the princess sought to protect the precious new life first. This is in contrast to her cousins, Princesses Akiko and Noriko, who shoved their imperial guards in front of them." Mariko stops and takes one overexcited breath. Her cheeks are flushed. She is dreamy-eyed. This is what gets her excited. Good to know. "They compare you to the empress after the 1923 earthquake!" The empress rolled up her sleeves and laid bricks for a new school. She refused to leave until the town was fed, the children safe. There is a famous picture of her hugging a mother who lost her son, both of their cheeks coated in dust. "They end with calling you our very own royal." Words fail me. Mariko seems to know I need a private moment. She places the article in my lap, then glides out the door. When she's gone, I pick it up. I rub my thumb over the last sentence of the article. It's not the royal part that warms me. No, it's the other two words. Very own, it says. Very own. Yes. That's me. A true daughter of Japan.”
Quote by Emiko Jean
Book:Tokyo Ever After
Work
Tokyo Ever After
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: A Ride of a Lifetime
Source: Cicatriz
“El amor no es un sentimiento, el amor es sensibilidad.”
Source: Mücadele Muhabbet: Gospel of An Unarmed Soldier
“I have no reason whatsoever to dislike or hate someone who is not the cause of my challenges.”
Source: Obedience is Happiness: The Promises Of Tomorrow
Source: Red Clocks
“You do not lose and become less; you lose and become more: more aware, more hallow, more infinite.”