Lafayette's Short Story: Longue Vie De La France

508 Words2 Pages

Instead, Washington looked at him with wide eyes. Suddenly he stood up, slightly bumping the table, and clutched Lafayette’s shoulders. He grabbed two shots on the table and handed one to himself, and one to Lafayette. He smiled at him and said, “Welcome to the Continental Army,” he clinked his cold glass to Lafayette’s. “Longue vie à la France.” Lafayette fumbled with the cold glass in his fingers and finally responded, “Long live the United States of America.”
***
He sometimes went back and thought about if this was really all worth it. If it was worth all the bloodshed and tears. He used to tell people it was, he used to tell his children that they’ll bleed and fight for them, though that was all they seemed to do. They would come back from missions with …show more content…

His mother, his father, grandparents, Adrienne, Washington, Hamilton, John Laurens, Henry Laurens, Henriette, Marie Antoinette, and countless others. After they passed, he had one question left in his mind; when his time was up, has he done enough? Will they tell my story? When he went, would he have left his mark on this world? Or would they forget him? And if he did, more importantly, who would tell his story? He only had a handful of people left that he could turn to; Jefferson, Monroe, and his children. They had freedom from Britain, but was it worth it? Was it worth all the heartache? Jefferson, Monroe, his children… his nation, those were the reasons he still fought. The reasons why he hasn't stopped yet. He still has people in his life, and he will fight for it. He remembered what Washington had always told him, “History has its eyes on you” and he was determined to be remembered in both America and France. He was determined to be written down in history books as the man that made a mark, that moved on. He wiped his eyes as he laid down the flowers he still clutched in his hands, adding spots of colour to the pale

Open Document