Damaged Goods, A Priceless Return
t the bottom of the embankment, the cold rain washing over me, the terrifying silence my only companion. He had left me.
nothing. Only the deafening roar of my own despair. I tried to push myself up, but m
cifully,
nt radio. The world was still mostly silent. Later, I learned they were rescue workers. I had
inkillers and fitful sleep. My family sat by my bedside, their lips moving, their hands holding mine, th
cked-open door, his face pale, his eyes haunted. He tried to speak, to gesture, an unspoken plea for understandin
y parents, an elaborate excuse for his actions. They read it to
come back for me, but got lost in the storm. It was all a lie. A flimsy, t
on. When they finished, I simply ty
pts at communication. I deleted him from my social media, changed my phone number. I
supported me unconditionally. Secretly, they arranged for me to apply to a prestigious arts conservatory abroad. A
, a profound sense of liberation. I was shedding the suffocating skin of my past, ready to sculpt a
nt seat in class, at the silent stage where we once performed. He sent countless texts, emails, desperate pleas for forgiveness, e
e. He checked his phone every hour, waiting for a message that never came. He drove past my house every day, hoping for a glimpse, a sign. He rehearsed
soaked to the bone, teeth chattering,
riveway. His heart leaped. This was his
ng to my parents, her voice low and serious. And then he heard it, a terrible, crushin
s world
/0/86394/coverorgin.jpg?v=6c717af0cf3e2e392924cb63e04f2a1b&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/1/106591/coverorgin.jpg?v=60130d2fb865880aba4658a48f41a951&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/1/104843/coverorgin.jpg?v=3c60e31b25c3507535767491f6bf894e&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/1/105057/coverorgin.jpg?v=202d59641d5f8e56e9f4255b2bc60b1e&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/1/101068/coverorgin.jpg?v=f6ab5c1b8c897b9c5868c7166ea93748&imageMogr2/format/webp)
/0/86395/coverorgin.jpg?v=55bb4b33b13d15db79b49aea662af755&imageMogr2/format/webp)