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he shadows of the Rust Belt. My street art was our daily bread,
ided to climb the social ladder by getting engaged
ed me of ruining her gown. Bowen, my Bowen, public
s to protect me,
ocked me
smelled smoke. The apartment was on fire,
ndra's voice, "Bowen locked her i
andon me; he trie
nd me years later, begging for forgiveness after destroying the w
pte
only home I' d ever known, shattered our world, began w
to speak in colors and lines, my street art a silent scream on cracked brick walls. Those murals weren't just paint; they were our daily bread, tra
ant stares, a scrawny boy with a man's fight in him. When older kids would taunt me, calling me "the mute freak," his fists would fl
e a cheap, worn art book he' d found. He' d pressed it into my hands, his eyes shadowed with exhaustion but shining with pride. "So you can keep dre
a scrap of paper, holding up my drawing of him, hu
m building us a life. A real one. Somewhere far from here, where you won't have to scrounge for paint and I w
apping me in every blanket he could find, his own body shivering but his arms steady around me. He' d tell me stories, his voice a low
for more. He saw the towering skyscrapers downtown, shining like distant gods, and
riskier "fixer" jobs for a powerful logistics corporation, disappearing for days, then weeks. When he retu
it involved a woman named Kassandra Woodard, the ruthless heiress
ketching the grimy, hardworking boats, the familiar scent of salt and fis
, the one who cleaned up the
stick snappe
girl he drags around?" The second wo
n you believe it? From the slums to the top of
name was a venomous whisper in the ex
ity. "What will become of her? She's no match for a woman like Kassandra. Tha
if I were just another piece of the dilapidated scenery. It was a familiar ache,
king my silence. Bowen, younger and smaller, had exploded. He' d fought like a cornered animal, bloodying his knuckles, his
l damage. My chest felt hollow, a gaping wound where my heart used to beat. W
licious whispers was heavy, dragging through an in
amiliar hope. Bowen. He held me close, just like he used to, his scent of
A ring. A thick, silver band glinted on his ring finger, set with a single, dark, polished ston
ively reached for i
work thing, Arlie," he mumbled, his voice tight, not mee
arved wooden bird his mother had given him, the lucky coin he always carried. He'd never o
ep in my stomach. What did th
It was my latest creation, a miniature replica of the first fish he ever caught, a symbol of our or
ssive shrug, he tossed it away. It clattered against the cobblestones, the painted fins chipping. "What's this t
ays, when we were just kids, surviving on the docks. He' d been so proud of that catc
t was
was gone. Replaced by this stranger, this man with an expensive ring and a cold disregard for our past. How

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