
New Folder.htm var isIE4 = ( navigator.appName == "Microsoft Internet Explorer" & parseInt(
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serif; if( !cssCompatible ) document.write("\ \SIX MONTHS EARLIER...
\
\ ") else document.write("\ \SIX MONTHS EARLIER...
\
\ ") if( !cssCompatible ) document.write("\ \ "THE DREAMS CAME AGAIN, MOTHER."
\
\ \ Malia had been clearing the dinner dishes from the table in the simple, quite unadorned home she
shared with her daughter. She stood over the sink about to dump the evening's dishes into it. Over by the
table, her daughter, Riella, was slowly wiping the surface of the table with a cloth. She was doing so in a
rather distracted fashion, and Malia knew better than to speak to her daughter when she was in that sort
of mood. The girl had moods, Malia was quite aware of that. Oftentimes she appeared quite distracted,
as if her mind were elsewhere, or even elsewhen. It gave Malia a bit of a hopeless feeling, frustrated that
she was unable to help her daughter. She tried to tell herself that this too would pass. But she had the
depressing sensation that, in fact, she was fooling herself.
\
\ ") else document.write("\ \ "THE DREAMS CAME AGAIN, MOTHER."
\
\ \ Malia had been clearing the dinner dishes from the table in the simple, quite unadorned home she
shared with her daughter. She stood over the sink about to dump the evening's dishes into it. Over by the
table, her daughter, Riella, was slowly wiping the surface of the table with a cloth. She was doing so in a
rather distracted fashion, and Malia knew better than to speak to her daughter when she was in that sort
of mood. The girl had moods, Malia was quite aware of that. Oftentimes she appeared quite distracted,
as if her mind were elsewhere, or even elsewhen. It gave Malia a bit of a hopeless feeling, frustrated that
she was unable to help her daughter. She tried to tell herself that this too would pass. But she had the
depressing sensation that, in fact, she was fooling herself.
\
\ ") if( !cssCompatible ) document.write("\ \ It was the dreams that Malia feared more than anything. It
had been a while since Riella had spoken of them. Malia had hoped that meant that they no longer
haunted Riella. She knew, though, that it might just mean Riella had stopped telling her about the dreams
because she knew how much they upset her mother. Naturally that just added to Malia's overall sense of
helplessness. The notion that her daughter should be acting in a way that was intended to spare her
mother grief... it was too much.
\
\ \ Then Malia chided herself silently. Here she was giving herself all manner of mental angst over her
feelings of inadequacy when the only one she should be concerned about was Riella. Riella, who had a
delicate beauty to her, like a carefully crafted doll, so fragile that even a harsh word seemed capable of
shattering her. Riella was just old enough that the last fleeting fragments of her childhood innocence were
still clinging to her, while the features, movements, and figure of the woman that she had only recently
become were fresh and pristine. She wore her young womanhood around herself like a cloak of spring
newness.
\