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Surviving was a sin: The world scar

Scarred_Jo
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
she was born in love, but placed into a world that demanded survival. Her father’s death made the warmth disappeared. What was once a home became a battlefield. Left with only her younger brother, she faced hunger, shame, silence. The world tried erasing her name, ignored her pain, and punished her for simply existing. Surviving Was a Sin is the anonymous story of a girl the world forgot — not a victim, not a heroine, just a scar hidden in plain sight. And this is only the beginning.
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Chapter 1 - He travelled Far

"Why is everyone crying?"

That's the question I want to ask the three-year-old me — the girl standing at the edge of a deep hole, in a crowd of wailing strangers, holding sand in her tiny hand.

I was a child like any other. Bright, loud, playful. But something in me — maybe too much awareness, too early — made me different. At two, I could read newspapers, recognize headlines, understand what death meant.

But that day… I didn't know who had died.

I didn't understand why my feet were standing in red earth, staring at a box slowly being swallowed by the ground.

I remember only flashes.

My father collapsing. The rush of feet. The shouting.

And then silence — the kind of silence that lives inside your chest, heavy and hollow.

Someone said it was time. My mother looked at me, handed me a handful of earth.

"Throw it in," she said.

I wanted to ask why.

But her eyes told me not to question. Her eyes always scared me when they hardened like that — like glass about to crack.

So, I obeyed.

The sand slipped from my fingers, falling on top of the box like a goodbye I didn't understand.

That night, home wasn't home.

The air was stiff. The rooms echoed. No music, no laughter. Only whispers and a kind of weeping that felt too old for my small ears.

I looked for something familiar — someone to bring back the feeling of "before."

So, I went to my baby brother, just a year old, sleeping like the world hadn't shifted.

I did what I always did.

Poked him. Disturbed him. Made him cry.

My mother came with that same warning tone — but this time, I didn't run away from her.

I ran to my father's room.

"Daddy!" I called, laughing like before.

But the room didn't laugh back.

It was cold. Still. Gloomy. Empty.

I turned slowly, heart thumping in a rhythm too old for my age.

My mum was behind me, rocking my crying brother.

"Mummy… where is Daddy?" I asked.

She didn't answer right away. And when she did, her voice was made of wet stones.

> "He travelled… far. And he won't be back for a long time."

But I knew she was lying.

I felt it.

Because death, even when you don't understand it, introduces itself by changing the air.

And the air that night —

was different.

That night, I stopped being a child.

I didn't know it yet — but that burial wasn't just for my father.

It was the beginning of burying everything soft, safe… and known.