The Blood Rose Lady
img img The Blood Rose Lady img Chapter 1 A Talk With Journal
1
Chapter 6 The Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 7 The Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 8 The Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 9 The Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 10 The Ninth Chapter img
Chapter 11 The Tenth Chapter img
Chapter 12 The Eleventh Chapter img
Chapter 13 The Twelfth Chapter img
Chapter 14 The Thirteenth Chapter img
Chapter 15 The Fourteenth Chapter img
Chapter 16 The Fifteenth Chapter img
Chapter 17 The Sixteenth Chapter img
Chapter 18 The Seventeenth Chapter img
Chapter 19 The Eighteenth Chapter img
Chapter 20 The Nineteenth Chapter img
Chapter 21 The Twentieth Chapter img
Chapter 22 The Twenty-First Chapter img
Chapter 23 The Twenty-Second Chapter img
Chapter 24 The Twenty-Third Chapter img
Chapter 25 The Twenty-Fourth Chapter img
Chapter 26 The Twenty-Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 27 The Twenty-Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 28 The Twenty-Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 29 The Twenty-Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 30 The Twenty-Ninth Chapter img
Chapter 31 The Thirtieth Chapter img
Chapter 32 The Thirty-First Chapter img
Chapter 33 The Thirty-Second Chapter img
Chapter 34 The Thirty-Third Chapter img
Chapter 35 The Thirty-Fourth Chapter img
Chapter 36 The Thirty-Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 37 The Thirty-Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 38 The Thirty-Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 39 The Thirty-Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 40 The Thirty-Ninth Chapter img
Chapter 41 The Fortieth Chapter img
Chapter 42 The Forty-First Chapter img
Chapter 43 The Forty-Second Chapter img
Chapter 44 The Forty-Third Chapter img
Chapter 45 The Forty-Fourth Chapter img
Chapter 46 The Forty-Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 47 The Forty-Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 48 The Forty-Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 49 The Forty-Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 50 The Forty-Ninth Chapter img
Chapter 51 The Fiftieth Chapter img
Chapter 52 The Fifty-First Chapter img
Chapter 53 The Fifty-Second Chapter img
Chapter 54 The Fifty-Third Chapter img
Chapter 55 The Fifty-Fourth Chapter img
Chapter 56 The Fifty-Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 57 The Fifty-Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 58 The Fifty-Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 59 The Fifty-Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 60 The Fifty-Ninth Chapter img
Chapter 61 The Sixtieth Chapter img
Chapter 62 The Sixty-First Chapter img
Chapter 63 The Sixty-Second Chapter img
Chapter 64 The Sixty-Third Chapter img
Chapter 65 The Sixty-Fourth Chapter img
Chapter 66 The Sixty-Fifth Chapter img
Chapter 67 The Sixty-Sixth Chapter img
Chapter 68 The Sixty-Seventh Chapter img
Chapter 69 The Sixty-Eighth Chapter img
Chapter 70 The Sixty-Ninth Chapter img
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The Blood Rose Lady

N. Y. Roisin
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Chapter 1 A Talk With Journal

Rozelyn.

That was the name my Irish mother Visenna gave me before her very last breath. My father said in his journal- the one I've found in that God-forsaken room and recently read minutes ago- that he can still recall her last moments after she gave birth to me. He declared that it was indeed haunting to a person even up to this day. Haunting because being able to witness with your eyes the moment your loved one took their last breath will forever be marked in your memories.

After my Irish mother closed her very eyes, my African father gave me my second name. He told me that the name was derived from a Japanese flower, kind of resembling a tulip but more elegant compared to a usual one.

Nadeshiko.

He told me it had a silent "I" when you pronounce it. He told me that he named me after a flower because, despite my mixed races, my Irish side is still dominant. I don't know but I kind of have this funny feeling that I sounded like a daughter of a boutique owner since my two names are both flowers.

Well, nevertheless, it kind of has chemistry to my last name: Zadzisai

Yes, I know. It sounds peculiar but it's actually common to African surnames. Wait 'till you hear my uncle Imani Onai on how he pronounced my last name.

As I've been saying, my name is pretty much well-combined, don't you think?

Rozelyn Nadeshiko Zadzisai.

Yes, it has a lot of Zs in it but what else do you expect? I was born from two different races and cultures, naming is one of their challenges but they named me impressively despite their varied origins.

By the way, if you've been thinking, let me introduce my parents.

My mother was born as Visenna Caoimhe Byrnes.

I know you've been wondering how to pronounce her second name but it's pronounced as Kee-va. It's actually a very popular name here in Ireland that means "the noble one".

My father is Eku Mazari Zadzisai. He's quite renowned because he was one of the lucky ones who married a westerner. I mean, it's considered lucky for an African-according to him.

My father nicknamed me Little Rose. But, my uncle insisted on calling me in a much more unique way. He said that I should have a moniker that would let every head turn around as soon as I have been called.

It was Christmas and I was wearing a bloody red dress that day. My father, my uncle, and our neighbor Thalia Turner unintentionally called me Little Bloody. But, out of nowhere, my uncle called me Bloody Rosie.

My uncle Onai nicknamed me eventually as Blood Rose and eventually people know me by that nickname, instead of calling me by my birth name. I don't know but I kind of like that people call me Blood Rose instead of my real name. It kind of gives me this enthusiastic vibe when they call me Blood Rose. I also have this feeling that I feel unique in this world since a blood rose is very rare. Red roses, yes. But Blood Roses are one in a million. My father told me once when he was still alive that he found the legendary Blood Rose in a remote land in Tanzania. It is also known as the Blood Tanzanian Rose or Ambrosia for the Greeks.

The Greeks called it Ambrosia since a Blood Rose has quite identical properties to the food of the Gods-both grant immortality to anyone who consumes it. My father also stated in his diary that its petals' are redder and more vibrant than the reddest blood. Its smell resembles the rusty aroma of fresh blood. And its thorns...its thorns can bleed any finger in a single prick.

Yes, it originates in Tanzania since Tanzanians used this rose in ancient times to prolong the elites' existence. It is the equivalent to the mythical Fountain of Youth.

As the saying goes, "Legends are once based on truth." But, due to it being passed from generation to generation, legends eventually became stories-a work of fiction, as they say. Stories that are only told during campfire or bedtime.

But, my father eventually proved the existence and powers of the Blood Tanzanian Rose-with an immensely fatal price. In fact, I am the tangible evidence.

Well, it just makes sense anyway to have that kind of nickname since I am an aspiring psychologist and I mostly take part in "bloody" patients. You know what I mean?

Anyway, I guess this is it for now my Dear Journal.

My stepmom has just popped in in the midst of Sunday morning when the sun was just about to crept into the sky.

Please remind me that I still have to start writing for my English essay that's to be passed tomorrow. You know that I'm quite forgetful when it comes to essays.

Truly Yours,

Rozelyn

            
            

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