Spencer easily could get to know where Emily works. That’s why she is on her way to the motorcycle shop where she is going to have a talk with Emily. Spencer is in rush and she has anger inside her, which is just waiting to come out. Spencer steps into the shop where she immediately can see Emily. It seems she is talking to a customer. There’s a big smile upon her face, while she is talking to that woman. She always had that smile. She could always take girls into her bed with that smile. Spencer hates it with all her heart. Emily notices Spencer as she stands not too far from her and a customer. She sees the bruises all over Spencer’s face. Maybe she was too brutal. However, she doesn’t regret doing that to Spencer because she deserved it. …show more content…
I know fighting is your style but I like the diplomatic way more. ˝ Spencer says. ˝Then let’s talk! What do you want to say? ˝ Emily asks. ˝I just want tell you that Aria is mine and always will be mine. We’re forever and you are scum for making us impossible. You’re so gonna regret that. ˝ Spencer says in threating tone. ˝Should I be scared now? ˝ Emily asks. ˝I don’t care if you’re scared or not, just realize that you’re in the way of Aria and me. ˝ Spencer says. ˝I don’t have a clue what you’re talking about. You were standing in the way of your relationship. Moreover, you were the one who ruined it. ˝ Emily says. I have to get back to the customer. ˝ Emily adds. ˝We’re not finished, Emily! However, I think I can wait. ˝ Spencer says. ˝We’re gonna meet soon! ˝ Spencer says as she walks out from the motorcycle shop. Spencer is furious. She wants revenge on Emily. She had enough of Emily and her smug smile. Spencer doesn’t even know why they were best friends for years, so much wasted time. Hanna is at home with her son, Craig and her girlfriend, Eliza. ˝I’m so glad we’re have time to be together finally. ˝ Eliza says. ˝Yeah, work was too much. ˝ Hanna says as she cuddles to …show more content…
˝ Hanna answers. Spencer’s next destination is Nora’s home. Spencer rings the bell. ˝Hey Spencer! ˝ Nora says as she sees Spencer. ˝Tell me what happened but be honest with me. ˝ Spencer says. ˝I told you what happened. We had sex, we both wanted it. ˝ Nora says. ˝I don’t believe you. You’re lying to me and you ruined my life with it. ˝ Spencer says. ˝How? ˝ Nora asks and Spencer can see in Nora’s eyes that she is enjoying her destruction. ˝Aria left me. ˝ Spencer says. ˝Are you blaming me for this? ˝ Nora asks. ˝You know, it’s not my fault just like your face. Who did this to you? ˝ Nora asks and gets closer to Spencer and slips her hand in Spencer’s jeans. ˝Stop it! ˝ Spencer says. ˝You don’t want me to stop. ˝ Nora says. Nora takes a hold on Spencer’s shirt and pulls her into the hallway of her house. ˝Let me go! ˝ Spencer says however, she lets Nora pull her into the house. ˝Come on! It will be fun! Just like the last time! ˝ Nora says and kisses Spencer’s neck. ˝No! ˝ Spencer says pulls Nora away from herself. ˝It’s enough! I said no! ˝ Spencer says and slams the door as she leaves. Melissa is sitting in front of Wren again. ˝In my notes I wrote that your state improved a lot and you are able to take part in the life of society. ˝ Wren
‘It doesn’t matter,’ I say, and I start to pick up the broken glass shards. ‘I knew it would happen.’
Sydney: (moves over to shake Clifford´s hand) Thank you for sending me your script, I really enjoyed it.
Emily alone that they thought she was crazy, and this scared people. In the beginning they only felt sorry for Miss. Emily, but as the story progresses things become a little weirder. After her father’s death it took three days for her to finally allow them inside to get him. Even though this made them feel sorry for Miss. Emily this proves that she was experiencing some emotional problems. Jack Schering states that “Emily became an emotional orphan in search of the father who had been taken from her.” ( Jack Schering page 400) I am sure that with dealing with all that she had going on she came off as a crazy old lady, Especially to the younger generations. Little did we know though that at the end of the story we would find out the extant of mental
She obviously is in great denial of her fathers death: “The day after his death all the ladies prepared to call at the house and offer condolence and aid, as is our custom. Miss Emily met them at the door, dressed as usual and with no trace of grief on her face. She told them that her father was not dead” (31). Understandably, Emily doesn’t want to let go of the only person who cares and shows love for her. When the case is such one holds on to a deceased body three days after the death; that’s when we have some serious problems.
She is a patient of asylum, also a prisoner. There are more than one changes in her miserable life. Start from her childhood, her father, that arrogant rich man looked down every person of Jefferson. What he has taught Emily it is his selfish dignity. Emily grows up in this kind of situation. For her teen period, the time girls will have oodles of fantasy and dream of love, her father broke it harshly. He shut those guys who asked Emily for a date out of the door as he thinks they are not good enough for her. Emily just surrenders as a good girl. That causes the first twist of her life when it comes her father's death. Emily thinks he left her alone after keeping her in prison all these years. She doesn't know how to stay with people and it is his responsibility. Thus, she wants revenge, she wants to treat her father like what he has done to her, trapped him. Emily tells the Jefferson that her father was still alive and denied the truth. "After her father's death she went out very little; after her sweetheart went away, people hardly saw her at all." It is her second change, Emily's lover leave her. We can find out that one more person she loves has abandoned her, again. It brings the following terror, she kills Homer, the unmarried man. Poor Emily cannot bear separation any longer, so she upgrades her action of escaping the truth, leading Homer's death to keep his body like exactly what had happened when her father died. Besides, she sleeps next to him, it shows
We eventually find out in the end that Emily kills Homer. She does this not do this out anger or hatred toward this man. It is the belief on her part, that a man has to play a significant role in her life that drives Emily to do this unbelievable act of violence. In her mind this was not a crazy thing to do.
In “a romance to kill” the author explains that they believe that the townspeople did not like how Emily was acting when she was with Homer. The townspeople felt that she was just messing around driving around with him out town. The story also shows that the town wanted them to get married but did not like the way they acted. I feel that because Emily grew up in this town and she was high class, people would watch out for her. The town seems to start feeling like they need to just do something to help her along. Emily needed to find love and happiness and start acting like a “lady” in this town. I feel that the townspeople are being frustrated with Emily at this point and need to see her move on but they also seem to gossip about her so often that it seems that they do not like
“A window that had been dark was now lit and Emily sat in it, the light behind her” (P.130). Emily was known in the town although people had no idea about what she really did; just like her sitting in the window, you knew she was there but all you could see was her shadow. Faulkner manipulated Emily and her relationship with the community along with her lover to create an overwhelming feeling of suspense. This feeling was strategically kept throughout the entire story. From Emily keeping her father’s dead body to her buying the arson to kill Homer.
As time goes on Emily grows up, her mother criticizes and blames herself for the distance between the relationships. It is causing tension in their already rocky relationship. The mother is obviously suffering from guilt on how Emily was raised and the unpleasant memories of the past. Emily was also suffering. We see her shyness towards those who care for her. She was a very depressed teen. She had quietness in her daily duties, and her feelings of not being good enough towards herself. She always felt that she was extremely ugly and not smart compared to her younger sister, Susan. She thought she was perfect. She was the typical “Shirley Temple” image.
At the beginning of the story when her father died, it was mentioned that “[Emily] told [the ladies in town] that her father was not dead. She did that for three days, with the ministers calling on her, and the doctors, trying to persuade her to let them dispose of the body” (626). Faulkner reveals Emily’s dependency on her father through the death of her father. As shown in this part of the story, Emily was very attached to her father and was not able to accept that fact that he was no longer around. She couldn’t let go of the only man that loved her and had been with her for all those years. While this may seem like a normal reaction for any person who has ever lost a loved one, Faulkner emphasizes Emily’s dependence and attachment even further through Homer Barron. After her father’s death, Emily met a man name Homer, whom she fell in love with. While Homer showed interest in Emily at the beginning he became uninterested later on. “Homer himself had remarked—he liked men” (627) which had caused Emily to become devastated and desperate. In order to keep Homer by her side, Emily decided to poison Homer and keep him in a bedroom in her home. It was clear that she was overly attached to Homer and was not able to lose another man that she
As can be seen Emily had a hard life. Everything that she loved left her. After her fathers death she
Emily’s father’s death was a major tragedy for Emily. It seems as if she was in denial of his death. Faulkner explains, “The day after his death all the ladies prepared to call at the house and offer condolence and aid, as is our custom. Miss Emily met them at the door, dressed as usual and with no trace of grief on her face. She told them that her father was not dead.” So Emily would not admit that her father had died. After she accepted his death, she had to endure life without a father. This must have been terribly hard, but she endured it. Many people also attempted to help Emily
Everyone viewed Emily differently, the rest of the patients at Heartland’s Women’s Mental Asylum believed she didn't belong there. She hadn't killed anyone, hadn’t tried to set the white house on fire like Susan did last year after she was released, but somehow she still ended up in the white jumpsuits like the rest one them. They did notice the mood swings, the times when she would throw her meds at the nurses or sit staring aimlessly out the window. But everyone had those, they were like animals caged, trapped with no way out they let there frustration out in different ways. The people in the free world didn't now much about emily, her teenage parents abandoned her, leaving her near a dumpster in the upper east side, her drug addled adoptive mother once tried to sell her for a bag of crack. Emily's entire file was filled with abandonment, if society was to label her she’d be worthless and
In the end Nora leaves. She slams the door as she goes which shows a
In fact, when her father dies the townspeople went to give their condolences. Saying “We remember all the young men her father had driven away and we knew that with nothing left; Emily would have to cling to that which had robbed her, as people will.” With that, you can see where Emily’s control issues came because her father had robbed her making Emily cling to have control. Emily shows no appreciation for the abandonment of her husband. Deciding that her best bet was to kill Homer and keep him in her house for decades. As watching Emily