26 May: Six Sentence Story

monochrome image of Avignon market during mid-1800s

The Accent of Exile

Brigid’s Diary: Part 11.2, Avignon, Spring 1836

I crushed a sprig of tansy between my fingers when the fishmonger’s voice split the morning, “Hear her English accent; she stirs rebellion,” and a bitter, cold metal scent spooled in me like warning smoke.

The market thinned into silence so quickly it felt arranged, bread abandoned on scales, lavender dropped mid-count, the air tightening around me as if language itself had weight; a crowd’s interest can rearrange you without touching you.

Felreil stood two steps back and did not speak, but his hand rested where the knife waited, and I understood how swiftly a rumour can turn flesh into evidence.

“I buy herbs,” I said, placing silver between us like a small shield, and above us, Avignon’s stone watched without mercy, the palace walls swallowing their bells, grandeur hollowed to bone.

The apothecary’s wife began the sign of the cross and stopped halfway; a pear struck the ground and no one stooped to claim it, as though the street were testing how easily it might learn to forget my face.

When Felreil murmured, dry as old paper, that spies should at least pretend to be subtle, I did not laugh, for exile is not the leaving of a country but the moment a crowd decides your voice does not belong among theirs.

Previous Instalments – To access all of the instalments on one page, please use this link. For the Liturgy/mindmapping posts click the link. Written for Denise’s Six Sentence Story including the word “interest”.  Some images created with Midjourney; all writing is authentically my own original work.©Misky 2006-2026.


25 responses to “26 May: Six Sentence Story”

  1. I maybe repeating myself but who cares!: reading Brigid’s Diary Six Sentence Stories without reading ( before or after) the corresponding Liturgy, is like… Mancini’s Panther not being Pink… UK fish without chips.. cars ( not sedans) without back windshield wiper!

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    1. HA! Back windshield wiper! Even my R5 has a back windshield wiper! I must find out why this is optional because it’s ludicrous! (I have a feeling that I’ll never hear the end of this). 😂

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  2. This is heartbreaking. Never having been an immigrant- nor even a traveler in a country that was not English speaking this is an experience you are creating for me in this series.

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    1. These stories benefit from experience, as a life-long traveler between countries, as a temporary immigrant to many of them. Foreign languages; customs; culture; accents … I have an odd hybrid accent (an idiolect shaped by multilingual exposure), so no matter where I go, people say I have an accent. (grinning)

      I remember decades ago, a supermarket cashier (who herself had an accent) asked me, “What do you think of Bush?” as if I could explain away another person’s decisions, or as if my accent gave me knowledge to answer her question. Most commonly, people say “Oh, I hear an accent; where are you from?” and I say ‘I’m from just up the street,” or my old dentist who always said, “When you go back to Canada, we’ll give you all these dental records,” — except that I’m not from Canada; I’ve lived in Canada a few years, but I’m not from there. My husband, who before retiring, took the train home every night from London, and he was talking to a colleague in Danish — a person walked by and said, “Go home Kraut!” My husband is Danish.

      Sorry for this long reply, but I have a life-time of stories about the privileges people think they’re allowed when it comes to an accent.

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      1. I have never left the USA well unless Niagara Falls CA counts- but within our borders we have the same thing. When I lived in Texas I heard “Where you from New York?” many times like it was supposed to be an insult- but seeing as how any NY accent I may have picked up I did so in South Florida- I just laughed them off.

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        1. Yes, laughter is always a good option.

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  3. Such an edgy episode… but a good one. Brilliant song too!

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    1. Thank you, Chris. The song is brilliant, I agree, but then I’m a huge fan of Nick Cave.

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  4. Good point that exile has more to do with the crowd than with being forced to leave a country.

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    1. It truly is, Frank.

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  5. nice measured but steady increase in tension (in this installment)

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    1. Thank you, Clark.

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  6. Why people do not want to befriend the other always confuses me and makes me sad.

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    1. In my experience, when jobs, money, and/or food are in short supply — the mood turns ugly toward other people, and foreigners are the first to feel the backlash.

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  7. […] for Brigid’s Diary stories generated from Denise’s Six Sentence Story prompts. The Liturgy worksheet for creating […]

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  8. for some reason every time I read your stories am feeling the same type of admiration I feel for Remarque. I don’t know why but … What I wanted to say I truly do enjoy your sixes.

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    1. That is a grand compliment, Reelika, because I am an admirer of his style of writing. Thank you.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. me too. I just love it and maybe that’s why I recognised something, a feeling or such, in your writing only he has accomplished before.

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  9. Love that last paragraph, that definition of exile smacks ya right in the throat.

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    1. Thank you so much! Glad you felt the message in that paragraph.

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  10. Some social prejudices never change. Vivid writing captures the mood of the scene.

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    1. Thank you very much.

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  11. I think you know I admire every word you post–whether or not I’m present to comment and Like every day.

    In this excellent and palpable story, the 2nd sentence really got me! What can I say? You’re 5-star all the time…and I’ll probably always envy your gift just a bit😊

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    1. It’s always lovely to hear you, Cale.

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Your comments are always welcome