Love Letters (Ed Sheeran Fanfic)
One. (repost, I can't find the first time I posted it)
āSweetheart, are you almost ready?ā My mother called from the bottom of the stairs.
āUnfortunately.ā I snapped.
My mother was sending me off to my aunt and uncles. The thing is, she doesnāt know how we set it up. Iāll start off with my mom first. Her name is Caroline. She drinks a lot and is only home between the hours of eight at night and six in the morning.Ā We were close until I was twelve and able to stay at home by myself, safely. Then she started going out with her friends more, had quit her job and was relying on the money my dad had to send us for child support. Now, my dad on the other hand is a complete other story. We arenāt close, but itās not like we hate each other. When I was twelve and my mom began going out, he started getting into more fights with her. Saying things like, how she should be home with us more and how she never does her part in being a parent. A week after my thirteenth birthday, he moved out and Iād spent every three weekends at his house until two Summers ago.
My last week of eighth grade, my mom decided to pack us up and moves us to Los Angeles, which is a reason Iād stopped seeing my dad as much. Then, LA typically being a place for parties, my mom began going out more. I was always made fun of in middle school and I didnāt have a lot of friends, and not having my mom around as much only made it worse. I wasnāt horribly bullied or anything, but bullying isnāt a good thing whether itās heavy or light. So, that Summer, my boobs finally grew and my body basically developed. I dyed my hair a lighter shade of blonde and went tanning a lot. Stereotypical Californian, I suppose. Iād seen at my last school that all the snobby bitches were the ones with a lot of friends, so that was the attitude I put off. It was like a switch. I changed completely. My mother, being so absent all the time, she barely noticed.
Now, back to moving with my aunt and uncle. My grandparents are British, but they passed before I was born and my mom had moved to the states when she was my age, which is where she met my dad. Sheād lost her accent almost completely, unless sheās overly drunk or angry. My aunt and uncle stayed there, since there wasnāt really a reason for them to come over here. Iād only visited them a few times before my mom went completely wannabe-teenager. A year ago, Iād started talking to my aunt about trying to move out there, and eventually withĀ a lot of planning and lying, it convinced my mom.
For my last year of high school, Iād come home when my mom would be leaving in the morning, and sheād be pissed. Then weād get into a fight, and Iād say something like āit should be okay for me to do it, if you do it!ā. then sheād storm off to God knows where. So, my aunt told my mom that they had a great, very strict education system for Uni in London. Of course, my mother jumped to it when she realized that her only responsibility would soon be gone. Iād faked that I didnāt want to go, but she never gave it a second thought.
āYouāre going to be late for your plane.ā She crossed her arms and tapped her foor at the bottom of the stairs.
āItās not like it matters to you,ā I sighed heavily, āyou arenāt even taking me there.ā
āI canāt!ā She flung her arms up in defense, āI have work. I love you, call me when you land.ā
She came in for a kiss that I dodged, so she just ended up hugging me. I could smell the faint liqour on her and I eyed her suspiciously.
āYouāre drinking already?ā I wheeled my stuitcases outside while she followed. We loaded them into the cab and I looked over at her.
āItās going to be a long day, my baby is leaving me! I needed to destress some how.ā She shrugged and headed to her car.
āAs if you actually care.ā I muttered under my breath and looked at the house I wouldnāt be seeing for a while. Slightly hoping my aunt and uncleās house was either the same size of bigger. Our home had three bedrooms, three and a half bathrooms and was two stories. Three including the basement. I like a lot of space and feel suffocated in a smaller, cluttered home.
I watched my mom pull away before I got in the cab. I sighed with relief as I sat in the back seat. I watched the house Iād spent my high school years in, slowly fade away. We left the gate that enclosed our small, private neighborhood.
I turned my phone on, sent my aunt a quick email that I was leaving now, and Iād see her when I land. I was slightly sad that I wouldnāt be able to see any of the friends I had anymore, or call them. But, lately it felt as if they didnāt care. I was in their lives for four years, and now Iām just leaving. I opened Facebook on my phone andĀ quickly read over the āIāll miss you!ā messages left by people Iād talked to for a total of ten minutes since I met them. I deleted it and turned my phone back off.Ā New life. But Iām also looking at this whole thing as a great chance to re-invent myself and be a whole new person.













