But as the distance grew, a terrifying realization settled in her chest. Lila, who stayed behind to fight the camorristi with nothing but her tongue and her temper, was the one truly alive. Lila was the fire; Elena was merely the smoke being blown away by the wind.
Elena stood at the edge of the neighborhood, her suitcase feeling lighter than it should, as if it were packed with nothing but the breath she had been holding for twenty years. Behind her, the strident shouts of the market were fading. Before her, the train station waited—a gateway to a version of herself that spoke in polished vowels and read books that didn't have grease stains on the covers. Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay [Neapolitan ...
Now, as the train pulled away from the platform, Elena watched the crumbling facades of the Neapolitan suburbs blur into a smudge of ochre and grey. She felt a sudden, violent surge of guilt. She was the one with the scholarship, the one with the "talent," the one who had escaped the shadow of the shoemaker and the carpenter. But as the distance grew, a terrifying realization
"It’s not about being better, Lila. It’s about breathing." Elena stood at the edge of the neighborhood,