And while there was still a Voidcritter poster above her bed, the rest of the room looked, well...fit for a teenager. That was what Rhea was becoming, faster and faster. Marcus might have been her twin, but...somehow, she seemed older than he was. Gone were the days where she was happy with anything. Somehow, she was turning towards teenagerdom faster than Emilia had ever been prepared for.
And in fact, Emilia could see why. Calliope's mother Judith was a very famous actress, while Calliope herself was an influencer, actress, model, and all round celebrity baby. Rhea was a proper preteen these days, complete with begging her mother for expensive things because Calliope was promoting them.
"Mum, please, I really want the new WARD palette!" she said, one evening. She still looked like the same Rhea, but it was somehow different. Something in her stance had changed. "Alyse says that she's getting it when they send it out from pre-orders and--"
"Rhea, please. You can have something for your birthday, but I've seen that makeup online and it's extremely expensive." Thanks to a little research, Emilia was armed and ready for any conversation about Calliope Ward. "I'm not buying you makeup when you already have a little bit."
"Alyse is getting it!" Rhea said, plaintively. "She said!"
"Well, what about your other friends?" She raised an eyebrow. "Is Chanel getting a WARD palette?"
"It's...her dad said no..." Rhea mumbled, coming to sit down next to Emilia. Luckily, mentioning her best friend had the desired effect. Rhea, despite all these new ideas and fads, still was quite protective of her best friend, and conscious of not making her feel left out.
"Then I'm also going to say no. Not just because it would be terrible if the two of you fell out over some makeup, but because I don't think it's the sort of thing you should be getting just yet."
"It's Calliope Ward's first ever eye shadow palette, though. I really want it." Rhea sighed. "I mean..."
"Well, if Alyse gets it, maybe she'll share it with you the next time you go over to her house." Emilia privately thought that Alyse was either exaggerating or quite spoiled, if her parents really did get her every latest thing she wanted, but that wasn't something she would say in front of Rhea.
"Yeah!" Rhea perked up. "I mean, yeah, cool."
That was new, too, this correcting of her enthusiasm. Emilia tried not to feel put out by it. Alyse, in her opinion, was almost as bad an influence as Calliope herself, but that was also something she'd never voice in front of Rhea - or at all.
Still, going into Maranda's room to check everything was neat and tidy, she couldn't help but think on it. Rhea was usually a little wiser, but these days she seemed to be flattered by the more glamorous sides to life Alyse had introduced her to. Not that Emilia hadn't once gone through that phase, but she had no idea how she should handle it. She didn't really blame Alyse entirely for it, because you couldn't blame young girls for this sort of thing, but Alyse lived a norm that Rhea seemed to want to emulate.
Sighing, Emilia tried not to think about it.
In Del Sol Valley, a young woman was trying to ignore her mother's ongoing phone call. Blah, blah, agent, blah blah, fired, blah, blah, whatever. Calliope was at an age where she loathed and loved the silver spoon in her mouth in equal measure. She loved that people adored her simply for who she was, but the price she had to pay was living with her mother.
"Walter, darling, it's Judith. The script is magnificent, but my agent read it over and he's simply not happy with whoever wrote in the scene where I'm left at the restaurant. Carol is an icon for many women, and frankly I feel it's just bland for her to be stood up by a man. She's chic, rich, desirable..." Her mother went up the stairs, trying to get out of another scene she didn't like. God help the poor writer who'd penned that one. Carol was one of her longest standing roles and one with practically no character development these days, thanks to Judith. The agent hadn't been unhappy at all, he'd simply been the one to break it to Mom.
Calliope's own agent was one Judith had picked out, and the brand she was presenting - a legacy of talent and a fresh face to the Ward family - had taken off beyond what they'd expected. A makeup line had launched, along with her small time acting gigs that Judith managed ("You won't be wanting to end up like a dreary small time actress, let them come to you,"), and she was always busy.
An interview about her recent role in a minor series had been scheduled - she'd played opposite another legacy boy, Justin, and Judith had been very into the idea, thinking that she could hint at some 'on set drama'. The agent, on the other hand, had told her that she needed to be stoic about anything she was asked. Be polite, say what a great experience it was, exit. So boring.
Some people had it so much easier. She wished that she had a different mother a lot of the time. One who didn't have the diva reputation, one who didn't cause misery everywhere she went. One who didn't push Calliope into something she hated.
It's interesting to see Rhea is starting to grow up and her personality changing. Emilia has a lot on her plate with raising all the kids. I think she is doing the best she can at the moment, but Rhea is turning out to be a bit of a handful. I'm excited to see what Rhea is like when she becomes a teenager.
ReplyDeleteYou develop your children so well! I always admire people who manage to write children so accurately and you're definitely one of them. Also I'm so excited for the Judith Ward/Calliope storyline (absolutely love that name, by the way). I love Judith Ward but she died without children in my game which I heavily regret, so I love seeing her and her offspring through your story. <3 (Fig from reading circle)
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