The Immortals Mary Hallberg (top non fiction books of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Mary Hallberg
Book online «The Immortals Mary Hallberg (top non fiction books of all time .TXT) đ». Author Mary Hallberg
At just 15, Matt Cavanagh is already the crush of choice for millions of girls, Immortal and otherwise. But the New Jersey nativeâs rise to fame hasnât always been smooth sailing.
When asked why his highly publicized relationship with fellow Immortal Jacey Smith fizzled, Matt became hesitant to reveal details. Instead, he only said: âJacey and IâŠwe had our differences. We had different priorities, and wanted different things, out of both life and relationships.â
But when Jacey was pressed on the issue, her response was a bit more blunt: âHe wanted to study and get good grades and stay out of trouble, and I just wanted to party.â
Mattâs section ended there, and I wasnât surprised at how tame it was. Yeah, it was probably uncomfortable for him to be asked those questions. But it was probably nothing compared to the what I imagined the rest to be.
The next section was Jaceyâs and, as it turns out, I was right.
Not one to let her presence go unknown, 16-year-old Jacey Smith is an Immortal shrouded in mystery. Raised in the city that used to be Toronto, Jaceyâs family was hit hard by the collapse when her father lost his job.
âMy dad worked at this place called the Rogers Centre,â Jacey said. âThey mostly held sports events, but after the collapse, people couldnât afford to go to stuff like that. So the place shut down. After thatâŠwell, everything pretty much went to hell. My dad eventually left, and we already didnât have much money before.. It was just me and mom, and she had to get a job, which she hadnât done in forever. She always tried to hide stuff from me so I wouldnât know how bad it was. But Iâm not stupid.â
But things started looking up for Jacey at age 15, when her childhood friend Elizabeth Brogan joined the Immortals. Though Jacey easily could have asked her friend for financial assistance, she was hesitant. âI donât like asking for help, you know? And I didnât want her to think I was just using her.â
Imagine Jaceyâs shock when Elizabeth approached her asking for money. âShe said she didnât have a lot saved up yet, and she had a big expense. I didnât have a lot either, but of course I wanted to help my friend. So we pooled our money, and she said it was enough. After that, she petitioned the panel, and I was Immortal in a month.â
But when it comes to just what Elizabethâs big expense was, Jacey remains tight lipped. âIf she wants to tell you, she will,â Jacey says. âBut I donât know if I want to. I will tell you this, though â we shouldnât have done it. Everyone around us thought it was the right thing to do. But I think we both knew from the beginning that it wasnât what she wanted. It never should have happened. itâs not that Iâm not grateful I got inâŠI just wish it had been in a different way.â
No surprise there. Jacey was just as reluctant to share things with Corrina as she was with me. Elizabeth, on the other hand, was the most forthcoming of them all.
For Elizabeth Brogan, early life was not easy. The youngest of four children, Elizabeth grew up outside Rochester in a two bedroom home. She recalls often going to bed hungry.
But things started looking up for Elizabeth at the mere age of 14, when a panel member spotted her on the curb outside her neighborhood. She had just asked and been rejected for food, having been without for the entire day. This panel member was headed home from work to dinner at his own house, to which Elizabeth was, of course, invited. By the end of the night, the panel had already received her petition to join, and she was officially accepted the following week.
But life in the Necropolis wasnât easy either. Under mounting pressure, both from her parents, who now expected her to support them, and her peers, most of whom were much older, Elizabeth replaced TNV with alcohol as her drug of choice.
But it wasnât long before all the partying caught up with her. Just a few months after arriving in the Necropolis, Elizabeth discovered she was pregnant.
âI was scared, of course,â she says. âBut I was also kind of excited. I think I was the only one. I know I could have raised the baby, even by myself. But my parentsâŠall my siblings have had kids when they were teenagers, and theyâd hoped that wouldn't happen to me. The fatherâŠwell, he bailed pretty quickly. I didnât have a lot of money saved up yet. So i decided not to have the baby. But the problem is, I didnât even have enough money toâŠyou know, take care of it. So I talked to Jacey. Weâd been friends when she lived in Rochester when we were kids, and she was visiting Rochester for awhile. She was the only person I stayed friends with after I moved here, even though it was hard to talk to her. not because I thought I was too good for them or anything, but because she was the only one who hadnât asked me for money.â She pauses to chuckle. âAnd now I was the one asking her for money. And she didnât have a lot either, but between the two of us, we managed andâŠthatâs how she got in.â
âIâm so grateful to her for being the only one to pull through for me. But I think both of us wonder if we did the right thing. I know I do.â
The story ended there, with no additional commentary from Corrina. I felt tears brimming in my eyes, already threatening to spill over. Suddenly everything Elizabeth and I had talked about,
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