Katherine’s instincts were correct, and she found her most vulnerable child, Aïcha, inside the walk-in wig wardrobe, huddled asleep on the floor.

The writer gives life to a story, the reader keeps it alive.
Katherine’s instincts were correct, and she found her most vulnerable child, Aïcha, inside the walk-in wig wardrobe, huddled asleep on the floor.

The prisoners inside the asylum cages, some too weak to stand, others beaten and broken into shells of themselves, can hear whispers that something has changed inside the cells, can hear singing, and rattling of bars, hollers of ‘let us out!’ The cries of freedom, get louder and drown out the darkened despair of lives lost to brutality, to Lord Anderson’s war.
