Personal Narrative Analysis

Words: 655
Pages: 3

Many emotions and thoughts should’ve past my time sooner, but I wasn’t the thoughtful type. I left the constant analyzing to Evelyn and Charlie. I was a doer. I worked best by following my gut instinct. It was what made me a good soldier and pilot. Pondering usually steered me down the wrong path. So I tried not to think in those hours. I fidgeted. I paced the room. I memorized that crazy design on the ceiling.
“We checked your background.” President O’Neill entered, startling me out of my daze from the kaleidoscope ceiling. A lavender linen shirt and khaki cropped pants replaced her evening gown but she still looked fierce even in casual wear. She went straight to the oak table in the corner and sifted through the pile of papers. She paid no attention to me sitting in the floral patterned beige cushioned chair which equaled in awfulness to the wallpaper and ceiling.
After a moment of weird silence on my part and wiggling in my seat to make some noise, the president finally addressed me. “What we learned from your voluntarily submitted blood sample and your allegiance manual is your DNA connects to the founding fugitives of Perta. Your ancestry.” She turned around, leaning
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Mainly because I reluctantly shared any motives to even my most private friends, let alone the leader of the States. If she picked up my desperation, she probably wouldn’t believe me. I had no choice. I just had to trust she would hear the truth. “I didn’t report before now because I traveled to New Australia with other shipmates. I consider them my family. I wanted to protect them, but now some of my family is in grave danger. They are back into the fleet to take part in an underground resistance movement, I know you can take advantage of. These dissenters are most loyal to what they believe is the Old America. The Americas you lead now. I’m here to do my part in the fight. We want freedom, Madam President. Our God-given