Remember Me by isakassees

Official Description: “If I only got one day a year, I would make it count.” One secret tree, one magic sunset, one chance to make a wish. Childhood sweethearts turned penpals, they grow up together and apart, falling in like, lust and love. E B, OOC, AH, A/J


A few months ago Isa came to me and said, “Hey, FM. I have an idea…”

She then proceeded to sneak chapters to me while I was supposed to be working, and as each showed up in my email I’d drop everything, open them in a tiny window on my desktop and get lost in the situation, the emotions, the feel, the flavor of the thoughts she managed to translate to the written word.

And when all the chapters were finished she asked me if folks would like it. It took an empty bank account to keep me from buying a plane ticket, showing up at her door, handing her a bottle of champagne and after emptying the bottle, use it to beat some sense into her for asking such a dumb question.

Because this story is enthralling.

Remember Me is a tale of children and loyalty and what might happen if you find your soul mate at 6 years old only to have them whisked away to another state. One single meeting between two children and the connection is made – it’s up to the children to forge their friendship through thousands of miles of separation – while only allowed to see each other one day per year.

Remember Me is a story of how children view the world around them, how within those childish thoughts can be a fierce loyalty and astute comprehension of how they fit into a world created by their parents.

This story isn’t angst, it’s real life. It’s children taking joy in their limited communication – because it’s better than nothing. Best friends even though they’re forced to exist as pen pals, there is nothing they don’t tell the other as each, and while remaining true to their ages, support the other.

Isa has the ability to see into the minds of children and remain true to their voices. Although the story is told from inside Edward’s head, you feel Bella’s thoughts so well you’d swear she were telling them herself. Yet their voices remain those of children – their dreams, their aspirations, their perception of the world around them is that of children in the normal, day to day struggle of life. Although they’re separated by thousands of miles they truly succeed at remaining best friends – neither of them ever questioning how unlikely this is. One meeting, one conversation, and they’re unquestionably attached for life, as only children can be.

A story like this could have remained primarily focused on the pain of their separation, but instead it’s an undercurrent, but not always the point. They maintain interests and hobbies, sharing them with each through no more than the written word. They make other, and local friends as they can, yet still lose nothing of their connection. Their once a year day together is as natural as if they saw each other every day, and it almost feels as if it serves simply as a refueling of their bond.

The story loosely follows canon themes – rebellion, pain, worry, parental behavior – but nothing is forced. It all comfortably fits into the worlds of Edward and Bella and what two extraordinary people they might turn out to be if they grew up together while still apart.

I’m tempted to call this a wonderful example of fluff, but it’s not. Remember Me has mature themes that two children struggle to resolve. It’s a lesson in making the best of what you’ve been given, and how their perception of that gift matures along with their years.

And oh yes, the two of them grow up. Most definitely.

I will end with one note. Don’t decide not to read this because you don’t care for children in fic. Think back and remember how you felt in first grade, when life inside your mind wasn’t childish at all – when your thoughts and desires were real and your dreams ran deep and the only thing holding you back was the knowledge the world was run by the grown-ups around you.

This is what Isa has captured – she validates the mind of the child and is perceptive enough to follow that mind as it grows, matures, rebels, tries to fit in, finds passion in hobbies, finds friends – all while these two lives are bound by a tether. Go… read. I promise you’ll love this as much as I do.

This story is so heartwarming and happy and fluffy. Though ti’s not all fluff, there is a teensie bit of angst here and there, but it only makes the story that much more realistic and the fluffy moments feel that much more intense.

The friendship between Edward and Bella forms when they’re only seven years old, and for years, these two can only see one another for one day a year. They keep in touch via letters at first. Eventually they graduate to e-mails and phone calls and IM’s, but still, Bella lives in Phoenix and when she visits Charlie during the summer, she’s only given one day in which to spend time with Edward.

Gradually though, their relationship shifts from friendship to something more, and it’s so very adorable.

And then she sent me those stupid pictures from her summer vacation with her mom. Gone were her usual t-shirts and jeans. Now she was on the beach. In her bathing suit.
Bella did not used to look like that. I was positive I would have noticed.
We’d decided to try emailing that year, since I had received my very own laptop for my birthday. I mailed her my email address as soon as it was set up and she sent me a message as soon as she made her own account on her home computer. With the attachment pictures from her vacation.
Again, she was on the beach. In her bathing suit. I had been really wrong when I tried to make Jazz calm down.
Bella was most definitely a girl.

You’ll find yourself rooting for these two characters and looking forward to how they spend their one day a year. Until one day turns into… well, this:

I heard the door to my bathroom open and I grabbed the first thing my hands touched and walked back out of my closet, only to screech to a halt. She was standing in the doorway in only a towel, using one hand to hold it to her body and the other to hold her dripping clothes. Oh God, I’m pretty sure I just saw some kind of lace.
“Berjigimafa.”
Her eyebrows furrowed and she cocked her head. “What?”
I shook my head, trying to remember how to speak basic English. Walking over to her, I took the wet clothes from her hands and shoved the dry ones into them.
“You’re shaking,” she whispered, her eyes glittering in the dim light coming from my closet.
“I am?” I gulped. I hadn’t noticed.
She nodded, focusing very hard on my very interesting desk behind me. “You need to get warm.”
“I do?” I blinked. Her hair was dripping water down her chest, disappearing into the towel. Lucky fucking towel.

Go check out Remember Me, you won’t be disappointed!

This Is Not My Life by isakassees

http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5540509/1/This_Is_Not_My_Life


Official Description: Follow Bella as she tries to survive a madman’s abduction and keep a stranger’s child from succumbing to his wild fantasies, and follow Edward as he tries to stay sane searching for his daughter taken right before his eyes.

Don’t miss the This Is Not My Life Outtakes.


EdwardsBloodType says: When Isakassees, a loyal reader of High Anxiety, asked my opinion on her story idea, I was honored and intrigued by the original concept enough that I knew I would read it, never mind beta for her.

The story starts very innocently, with handsome young Dr. Edward Cullen and his four year old daughter, Lily, literally run into Bella in the grocery story. Things suddenly go awry when a psychotic madman James, sees Bella and Lily giggling amongst a pile of wayward apples, thinking in his messed up mind that they are his estranged wife and daughter. Subsequently, he kidnaps them by gunpoint, taking them far into the remote woods to a cabin that he has well prepared… and then shit gets weird.

Bella’s POV is in fact quite scary, but at the same time, speckled with these humorous, witty bits of her inner monologue that make the extreme angst of the piece much easier to swallow. We watch as Bella lives in terror of this lunatic, forcing her to take various unnecessary medications which make her drowsy, clumsy and incoherent. He hurts her physically, denies her food and punishes her for things that she does as a direct result of the effects of the pills he’s giving her. However, he restricts all of his abuse toward Bella, and is nothing but sweet and kind to Lily.

The relationship between the sweet little girl she doesn’t know quickly blossoms into this beautiful, unexpected mother /daughter connection that is just heartwarming and the true highlight of the story.

All the while from Edward’s point of view, you see him breaking down, distraught at the disappearance of his child while he relies heavily on the strength and support of his amazing family as well as Charlie, who is helping with the case. Isakassees does an awesome job of giving each of her characters a voice and distinct personality, which are very canon, but at the same time, funny and relatable. You want to abandon your own family for one night at the Cullen’s dinner table. (Except for when Renee is doing the cooking.)

The finite details of the kidnapping and rescue aspects are remarkably realistic and accurate, so much that I often question where Isakassees really acquired her four month old baby. All joking aside, she allows us to feel as though we are intimately involved in the actual grueling process of police procedure, frustrating as it all is.

For her first piece of fiction, Isakassees delivers a realistic, dramatic, funny story, giving the readers a frightening and suspenseful ride in the weeks of two people taken from their lives, and the family that was left behind to grieve. It is incomplete as of yet, but there is a promise of an HEA and some much anticipated lemons, as we’re all waiting for the reunion with baited breath so Edward can finally hook up with Bella, once she regains her life back.

MF’er says: EdwardsBloodType did a fantastic job of summarizing this story for you all that I feel it would be silly for me to add to her words.

isakassees has done such a fantastic job coupling angst with humor and taking us all along on this wild ride. You will get wrapped up in this story quickly, and find yourself both sympathizing with and hoping the best for her characters in the future.

Along with everyone else, I am awaiting that reunion and the HEA and looking so forward to James getting exactly what he deserves for what he’s done.

Kassiah says: Like Madame said, EdwardsBloodType did a fabulous job. I just wanted to throw my two cents in here and say read this story, right now. It’s so amazing and real. I am absolutely on the edge of my seat waiting to see what will happen. I think you’ll love it too.