NIGHT TERRORIST
BY ANNE M. ERBYNSTEIN
From the vantage point of her fate, Sherina took leave of all evidence of practical religeos
dogma and the principals of her pimordeal foundation for living. Even as a child, she had been provided a most clearly
defined platform, entrenched in the higher standard of social values her teachings had been anchored in the tenets
of her great grandfather's teachings and preaching.
Her mother, a staunch believer, had not fallen far from the family tree. An education in
the best local schools had been provided to her and it led her to teaching---as her grandfather once had for 16
years during the early years near the turn of the century. They were members of a royal order, a family which, long
before then, had earned the respect and high regard of thier small urban community.
Familial support was never lacking during the years of her youth. The patriarch of a very
polished group, Sherina's father had established a foreground for high esteem , offering an imprint of refinement
which was left as a legacy for each of her siblings even after his sudden demise. Her father's career
as a profesor, especially during those times, seemed to work a batch of good as his strong community image layed heavily upon
Sherina, her siblings and others in thier hometown, yet in very differing ways.