Mag-log inÉlianor is a young woman whose existence has been a long suffering. Due to her weight, she was the target of mockery her entire life, both within her family and throughout the city. The walls of the school became the stage for her daily and relentless harassment. Her torment reached its peak during a public humiliation, so cruel and violently orchestrated that she found herself covered in an indelible disgrace in the eyes of all. Broken and consumed by shame, she had no choice but to flee this city that had become a hell. Her exile was marked by an additional drama: she left, carrying a child whose paternity she did not know, possibly the result of ultimate violence or a desperate relationship. Five years later, Élianor returns. The timid and wounded girl has disappeared. In her place stands a woman of breathtaking beauty, slim and radiant, possessing a power and authority that cannot be contested. She returns to the land of her former nightmare with a single obsession: to take revenge with cold methodical precision on all those who broke her, and to make the entire city pay the price for its indifference and cruelty.
view moreÉlianor
The mirror in the entryway is my first enemy of the day. I lower my eyes too late. I've already seen the shapeless mass, the face too round, the beige sweater that bulges in all the places I'd like to hide. I'm seventeen years old, and my reflection is that of a shadow, thick and ill-defined.
A grunt behind me.
"You're blocking the way, Élianor. Can't even move around in our own house because of you."
My sister Liora's voice is a cleaver. She slips past me, thin and mean as a snake, her high school athlete's body gliding through the space without effort. Her gaze looks me up and down, a sneer of disgust on her lips.
"Seriously, try to stand up straight. You look like a sack of potatoes. And that sweater... what's it supposed to hide, exactly? The shame?"
I clench my teeth, my heart pounding fit to burst. Each word is a sting, precise and familiar. I shrink against the wall, the cold paint through the fabric, wishing I could disappear into the wallpaper flowers. I'm in my own home, and yet, I'm in the way. An awkward piece of furniture.
At the table, breakfast is another minefield. The smell of toasted bread, which should be comforting, smells like judgment. My mother heaves a theatrical sigh when she sees me take a slice.
"More bread, dear? You know, with your... constitution, maybe you should think about fruit. An apple is so refreshing."
She says "constitution" like one might say "shameful disease." She never really looks me in the face; her gaze slides over me like a persistent stain.
My father, behind his newspaper, chimes in without even looking up. His voice is an edict, distant and without appeal.
"She's right, Élianor. Obesity is a disease. It takes discipline. Willpower. Look at your sister."
Liora, right on cue, snickers, spreading a generous layer of butter and jam on her own toast.
"Discipline, she doesn't know. The only thing she's good at is filling her plate. And even then, half the time, she misses it."
Her shrill laugh pierces the room. I lower my head, cheeks burning. The toast I'm chewing tastes like ashes and guilt. Each bite is a sin, each chew damning proof of my lack of willpower. I am their designated scapegoat, the manufacturing defect in this family that considers itself perfect. Their contempt is a lead weight that crushes me a little more each day, burying me a little deeper.
The street leading to the high school is an ordeal I walk every morning, my stomach in knots. I'm seventeen, and I should be dreaming of freedom, first kisses, the future. Instead, I dream of invisibility. The glances of passersby slide over me, look away with cruel indifference or poorly concealed amusement. Whispers that crackle like a fire of twigs. Stifled laughs that sting the back of my neck. I recognize some faces. Former classmates who pretend not to see me. Neighbors who nod with false pity.
"Watch out, here it comes," murmurs a voice from a doorway.
"Move it, the boat's coming into port," shouts another, louder, from across the street.
I stare at the sidewalk in front of my feet, the cracked asphalt, the squashed gum. I try to make my body smaller, less visible, to hunch my shoulders, to suck in my stomach. In vain. My very existence is an inconvenience, an anomaly in the orderly, clean landscape of this small provincial town. I am the fat one. Fat Élianor. The one they laugh at between classes. The one they pity, sometimes, with a furtive glance quickly averted, before turning back to join in the general mockery.
I walk, head down, carrying the weight of their stares. Carrying the weight of my family. Carrying the weight of my own flesh, become a prison from which I don't know how to escape. Each step is an humiliation. Each breath, a shame. At seventeen, I am already a ruin, and the day has barely begun. The worst, I know, awaits me behind the high school doors.
Élianor They arrive a week later, Mathis and Maxime, fifteen and thirteen years old, Viviane's sons, my half-brothers, these boys I have never known, I have never seen, I have never touched, I have never loved, but whom I love, whom I already love, without knowing them, without ever having seen them, without ever having touched them, without ever having loved them, but by loving them, because they are my mother's sons, because they are my brothers, because that's what a family is, it's not blood, it's not papers, it's not lies, it's those who stay, those who hold on, those who love, those who don't leave, those who don't flee, those who don't betray, those who are there, always there, whatever happens, whatever we do, whatever we say, whatever we choose. They get out of Viviane's car with looks of defiance, looks that defy the world, gestures that say they are here, that they are strong, that they are big, that they are turbulent, that they are insolent, that they are everything th
Élianor Evening falls over the city, night envelops the house, the children are in bed, Matha has gone up to rest, Liora is in her room, Marcus is in the living room, and I am in the kitchen, alone, with my phone, with my thoughts, with my fears, with my doubts, with my hopes, with my loves, with everything I lived today, everything I discovered, everything I learned, everything I loved, everything I forgave, everything I saved, everything I lost, everything I gave, everything I sacrificed, everything I sold, everything I betrayed, everything I abandoned, everything I left, everything I forgot, everything, everything, everything. The phone rings, I look at the screen, it's Viviane, it's my mother, it's the one I met this morning, the one who took me in her arms, the one who told me she loved me, the one who asked me for forgiveness, the one who told me her story, her life, her fears, her doubts, her angers, her vengeances, her lies, her secrets, her crimes, everything she lived, ev
ÉlianorThe house is warm, bright, welcoming, as it always is, as it has always been since Matha has been here, since my children have been here, since Marcus has been here, since Liora has been here, since this family has been building itself, stone by stone, day after day, hope after hope, forgiveness after forgiveness, love after love, without me realizing it, without me wanting it, without me daring it, without me believing it, without me hoping for it, without me loving it, but by loving it, because that's what a family is, it's not blood, it's not papers, it's not lies, it's those who stay, those who hold on, those who love, those who don't leave, those who don't flee, those who don't betray, those who are there, always there, whatever happens, whatever we do, whatever we say, whatever we choose.The twins are in the entrance, they saw me arrive through the window, they ran, they rushed, they are there, in front of me, with their shining eyes, their smiles that light up their fa
I look at him, I look at him with his eyes that are his, that are Marcus's, that are Viviane's, that are this family's we are building, stone by stone, day after day, hope after hope, forgiveness after forgiveness, love after love, and I say to him, in a voice I want to be soft, I want to be tender, I want to be that of the mother, of the one who reassures, who protects, who defends, who keeps, who saves, a voice that does not tremble, that does not crack, that does not break, a voice that says that everything is fine, that everything will be fine, that everything is good, because I am here, because Marcus is here, because Matha is here, because Liora is here, because we are here, together, forever, for eternity, for the end of time, for everything we have, everything we don't have, everything we will have, if we want, if we dare, if we believe, if we hope, if we love:— A little, my darling, a little, I cried a little, but they were tears of joy, tears of happiness, tears of love, be












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