Chapter 1: The Weight of the Shroud
“If you’re too much of a coward to wear it, then don’t bother coming to our own birthday party,” my twin sister sneered, holding up the neon-pink string bikini, entirely unaware that the horrific scars she was trying to expose were the exact reason she was still alive to mock me.
Our shared bathroom felt less like a sanctuary and more like a heavily contested demilitarized zone. The expansive marble counter was a chaotic battlefield of expensive cosmetics, shimmering highlighters, and curling irons, belonging entirely to Chloe. She stood before the brilliantly lit vanity mirror, admiring her reflection. Her skin was a flawless, golden tapestry, radiating the kind of effortless, sun-kissed perfection that made people stop and stare.
Leaning against the doorframe, suffocating in the oppressive July heat, was me. Maya.
While Chloe wore a silk robe that slipped easily off her unblemished shoulders, I was entombed in a heavy, oversized gray fleece hoodie and thick, dark sweatpants. It was nearly a hundred degrees outside, the California summer baking the pavement into a shimmering mirage, yet I stood there dressed for a blizzard. I was sweating, a slow, agonizing prickle that stung against the hyper-sensitive, damaged nerve endings covering ninety percent of my torso, but I didn’t dare roll up my sleeves.
“It’s our eighteenth birthday, Maya,” Chloe snapped, turning away from the mirror. She tossed the tiny, neon scrap of spandex directly at my chest. “A milestone. All my friends are coming. The entire senior class. Half the football team. And I am not letting you ruin my aesthetic by sitting in the corner looking like a depressed monk.”
I caught the bikini. The rough synthetic fabric felt like sandpaper against my trembling palms. I looked down at it, my throat tightening with a familiar, suffocating panic.
“Chloe, you know I don’t swim,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper, trying desperately to de-escalate the venom in her eyes. “I’ll just wear a sundress. I’ll stay out of the way, I promise—”
“No!” Chloe interrupted, her voice cracking with a deep, irrational, long-festering hatred. She stepped toward me, her perfectly manicured finger pointing directly at my face. “You always do this! You always act like some fragile, broken little bird so Mom and Dad will coddle you and ignore me! You’ve weaponized this ‘mystery illness’ of yours for our entire lives.”
She stepped closer, the floral scent of her expensive perfume overpowering the sterile, medicinal smell of the heavy burn creams I applied every morning.
“I know what you’re doing,” Chloe hissed, her eyes narrowing into cruel, resentful slits. “You just want everyone to ask, ‘Oh, what’s wrong with Maya? Why is poor Maya wearing a sweater?’ You’re going to put this bikini on, and you’re going to show everyone that there is absolutely nothing wrong with you. You’re going to prove that you’re just a freak who wants attention. If you don’t wear it… you’re dead to me.”
I looked at my sister’s furious, beautiful face. It was a face biologically identical to my own. We shared the same almond-shaped hazel eyes, the same sharp cheekbones, the same dark, wavy hair. But from the neck down, we were two entirely different species. She was pristine. I was a monster.
My hand instinctively drifted to my collarbone, my fingers pressing against the thick cotton of my hoodie. Beneath the fabric, I could feel the jagged, hardened, raised ridges of the massive burn scars that mapped my body. It was a violent, permanent topography of trauma.
I swallowed the heavy, metallic lump of sorrow in my throat. I couldn’t tell her the truth. The psychiatrists had explicitly warned my parents twelve years ago that forcing Chloe to confront the repressed memories of the fire that nearly killed us could irreparably shatter her fragile mind. Her amnesia was a psychological fortress, built to protect a six-year-old girl from the sheer terror of smoke and collapsing, burning wood.
So, I had carried the physical and emotional burden in absolute silence. I let her hate me, because her hatred meant she was sane. Her vanity meant she was alive.
“Okay, Chloe,” I whispered, clutching the neon fabric in my fist. “I’ll think about it.”
Chloe rolled her eyes, turning back to her flawless reflection. “Don’t think about it. Just do it. For once in your miserable life, try to be normal.”
I backed out of the bathroom, retreating down the carpeted hallway to the safety of my bedroom. I closed the door and locked it. The silence of my room was a heavy, oppressive blanket. I walked over to my desk, my eyes drifting down to the bottom drawer. It was locked. Inside, hidden beneath old notebooks, was a single, scorched photograph of our old house—a charred, blackened skeleton of wood and ash.
I stared at the drawer, my chest heaving with silent, agonizing breaths, knowing that maintaining my sister’s fragile sanity was slowly, inevitably costing me my own soul…
Chapter 2: The Poisoned Table
Three days before the party, the tension in our house had thickened into something almost physical, a toxic fog that settled over the dining room table.
My mother, Sarah, had spent the entire morning nervously polishing the silverware, her eyes darting toward me every time Chloe mentioned the upcoming pool party. My father, David, sat at the head of the table, cutting his steak with forced, mechanical precision. They were walking a psychological tightrope, terrified of triggering my anxiety, and equally terrified of awakening the dormant trauma buried inside Chloe’s brain.
“Girls,” my mother began, her voice trembling slightly as she gripped her wine glass. Her knuckles were white. “Your father and I were talking. We were thinking… maybe a massive pool party isn’t the best idea for an eighteenth birthday. We just think a catered evening indoors, maybe renting out the banquet room at the country club, might be more elegant. More… comfortable for everyone.”
Chloe froze. She lowered her fork slowly, the metal clinking against the porcelain plate with a sound that echoed like a gunshot in the silent room.
“More comfortable?” Chloe repeated, her voice eerily quiet before rapidly escalating into a shrieking crescendo. “Of course you do! Because Maya can’t handle the sun! Because Maya needs to be protected! Because this entire family revolves around Maya’s pathetic, invisible sensitivities!”
“Chloe, that is enough,” my father warned, his voice thick with a desperate, pleading authority. “Your sister has a medical condition. You know she can’t be exposed to the sun like that.”
“It’s a lie!” Chloe stood up, her chair scraping violently against the hardwood floor. Her face was twisted in an ugly, jealous rage, pointing a shaking finger directly at me. I kept my eyes locked on my plate, my hands resting in my lap, hiding beneath the oversized sleeves of my long-sleeve cotton shirt.
“I am so sick of living in her shadow!” Chloe screamed, tears of pure, unadulterated frustration spilling over her eyelashes. “You look at her like she’s some kind of tragic saint, and you look at me like I’m a shallow burden! I have worked my entire life to be perfect for you, and you don’t even care! You only care about the freak!”
“Do not call your sister that!” my mother cried out, standing up, her voice breaking into a sob.
“I’ll call her whatever I want!” Chloe shrieked, entirely unhinged by years of perceived neglect. She leaned across the table, her eyes burning with a venom so pure it took my breath away. “I wish whatever fake, invisible disease she has would just finish the job! I wish she would just die so I could finally have my parents back!”
A suffocating, deathly silence fell over the dining room.
The air was entirely sucked from the space. My father buried his face in his large, calloused hands, letting out a choked, agonizing sob that shook his broad shoulders. My mother staggered backward, bumping into the china cabinet, looking as though she had just been physically stabbed in the chest. They were looking at Chloe not with anger, but with a profound, helpless horror. They knew the truth. They knew that the girl Chloe was wishing death upon was the only reason she was breathing.
I sat perfectly still.
For twelve years, I had worn long sleeves in the dead of summer. For twelve years, I had endured the relentless, agonizing heatstroke, the whispers from classmates, and the physical isolation, entirely to protect Chloe from remembering the night our world burned down. I had sacrificed my youth, my comfort, and my dignity to keep the monsters locked inside the dark corners of her mind.
But looking at the sheer, unadulterated hatred in her beautiful eyes, a chilling, heartbreaking realization washed over me.
The silence wasn’t protecting Chloe anymore. It was festering. The lie was mutating into a poison that was actively destroying her soul, turning her into a cruel, narcissistic monster. If I continued to hide, she would spend the rest of her life hating me, and hating our parents.
The protective instinct that had defined my entire existence warped into a cold, terrifying resolve.
I slowly stood up. The scraping of my chair cut through the sound of my father’s weeping.
“Stop crying, Mom,” I said. My voice was eerily flat, devoid of any emotion. It was the clinical tone of a surgeon preparing to amputate a limb to save a patient.
I looked directly into Chloe’s triumphant, furious eyes. She thought she had finally broken me. She thought I was going to run to my room in tears.
“A pool party is fine, Chloe,” I said, my voice echoing in the dead silence of the room. “You want me to be normal? You want me to stop hiding?”
Chloe narrowed her eyes, suspicious but victorious. “Yes.”
“Then I will,” I whispered, feeling the irrevocable weight of my decision settle into my bones. “I’ll wear the bikini.”
I turned and walked away from the table, leaving my parents staring after me in absolute, horrified shock, and my sister basking in her arrogant victory. I walked up the stairs, my heart pounding a frantic rhythm against the heavy, scarred tissue of my chest. I locked myself in my bathroom, pulled the neon pink fabric from the counter, and stared at my reflection, knowing that to save my sister’s soul, I was going to have to walk directly into the fires of my own execution…
Chapter 3: The Theater of Cruelty
The day of our eighteenth birthday dawned bright, cloudless, and brutally, unforgivingly hot.
Our sprawling backyard had been transformed into a teenage bacchanalia. It was a kaleidoscope of splashing turquoise water, tanned skin, inflatable flamingos, and the overwhelming scent of coconut tanning oil mixed with sharp chlorine. The heavy, rhythmic thumping of bass from the DJ’s massive speakers vibrated through the soles of my feet. There were nearly two hundred teenagers swarming the patio, a sea of designer swimwear, red solo cups, and superficial laughter.
In the absolute center of it all, standing on the raised edge of the infinity pool, Chloe looked like a teenage goddess. She was wearing her neon-pink string bikini, her flawless, golden skin glistening in the sun. She laughed loudly, tossing her dark hair over her shoulder as a group of boys handed her bright, fruity mocktails. She was holding court, basking in the intoxicating glow of absolute popularity.
I was sitting in the darkest, most isolated corner of the patio awning, feeling like a grotesque alien species that had crash-landed on my own property.
I was wearing the identical neon-pink bikini. But over it, I was entombed in a thick, heavy, oversized white terrycloth bathrobe. It was pulled tight around my neck, the thick cotton belt knotted fiercely at my waist. I was sweating profusely. A single drop of sweat rolled down the nape of my neck, tracing a path down my spine, stinging violently as it hit the sensitive, grafted skin stretching across my shoulder blades. I gripped the armrests of my patio chair, my knuckles white, struggling to breathe through the suffocating heat and the rising, tidal wave of panic.
Through the sliding glass doors of the kitchen, I could see my parents. They were hovering in the background, pacing like caged animals. My mother was wringing her hands, tears continuously pooling in her eyes. My father looked physically sick. They wanted to intervene. They wanted to shut the party down. But I had made them promise, begging them the night before to let this happen. I had told them that Chloe needed to know, that the poison had to be lanced. They were paralyzed by their own anxiety, terrified of the psychological explosion that was about to detonate in their backyard.
Suddenly, the heavy bass of the music cut out.
A sharp, ear-piercing screech of microphone feedback echoed through the yard, causing several teenagers to wince and cover their ears.
Chloe stood by the DJ booth, holding a wireless microphone. She tapped it twice. Thump, thump.
Two hundred heads turned away from the water, their eyes locking onto the birthday girl.
“Attention everyone!” Chloe beamed, her voice amplified, echoing off the surface of the pool. “Thank you all so much for coming to celebrate our eighteenth birthday! It means the world to me.”
The crowd erupted into cheers, raising their plastic cups in the air.
Chloe’s smile remained plastered on her face, but as her eyes scanned the crowd and locked onto the dark corner of the patio where I was hiding, that smile turned razor-sharp. It dripped with a malicious, venomous intent. She had waited her entire life for this moment. She was going to cure me of my “need for attention” by publicly shaming me into submission.
“But, as you all know,” Chloe continued, her voice dripping with mock sweetness, “a birthday isn’t complete without a twin tradition.”
The crowd cheered again, though a few people looked confused.
“Maya, sweetie!” Chloe called out, pointing directly at me. Instantly, two hundred pairs of eyes shifted from the pool, staring through the shadows to find me sitting in my thick, absurd winter garment.
“You’ve been hiding in that depressing, heavy bathrobe all day,” Chloe mocked, her voice booming through the speakers. “It’s a hundred degrees out, Maya. You’re making our guests uncomfortable. We had a deal, remember? The twin pact. Take off the robe, come to the edge, and jump into the pool with me.”
I didn’t move. My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird.
“Come on, Maya!” Chloe taunted, her voice turning cruel, utilizing the peer pressure of the crowd as a blunt-force weapon. “Or are you too much of a coward to let people see who you really are? Are you going to ruin our birthday because you need to be special?”
A few of Chloe’s closest, meanest friends began to clap a slow rhythm. “Take it off,” one of them shouted.
The rhythm caught on. Teenagers are predatory by nature; they smell blood and they circle. Within seconds, a massive, synchronized chant echoed through the backyard.
“Take it off! Take it off! Take it off!”
They thought it was a joke. They thought it was lighthearted sibling banter. They thought I was just being a prudish, introverted killjoy who was afraid to show a little skin.
Inside the kitchen, my father placed his hand on the glass door, ready to slide it open and end the nightmare.
I caught his eye through the glass. I gave him a microscopic, subtle shake of my head. No.
The chanting grew deafening, bouncing off the brick walls of the house, a tidal wave of auditory pressure demanding my surrender.
I took a slow, shuddering breath. I closed my eyes, summoning every ounce of courage I had spent twelve years hoarding in the dark. I slowly stood up from the patio chair. My hands dropped to my waist, my trembling fingers gripping the thick cotton knot of my bathrobe belt.
I stepped out of the shadows of the awning and into the blinding, unforgiving sunlight, knowing that in exactly five seconds, the world as they all knew it was going to end…
Chapter 4: The Fire and the Truth
I walked slowly toward the edge of the sparkling blue pool, the rough concrete burning against the soles of my bare feet. The crowd parted for me, the chanting of “Take it off!” maintaining its aggressive, rhythmic pulse.
Chloe stood at the edge of the water, the microphone resting against her hip, a look of absolute, arrogant victory plastered across her flawless face. She thought she had won. She thought I was going to reveal a pale, un-toned, perfectly normal body, proving to the entire school that my reclusive nature was nothing more than a pathetic, attention-seeking personality disorder.
I stopped exactly three feet away from her. I looked into her beautiful, expectant hazel eyes.
My fingers, slick with sweat, gripped the thick knot of the bathrobe belt. I pulled.
The knot came loose.
I gripped the lapels of the heavy white terrycloth. I opened my arms, pushing the fabric backward. The heavy robe slipped off my shoulders, sliding down my arms, and pooled into a bright white halo around my ankles on the hot concrete.
I stood in the blinding, midday sunlight, wearing nothing but the tiny, neon-pink string bikini.
The reaction was instantaneous, violent, and absolute.
A collective, massive, horrified gasp rippled through the crowd of two hundred teenagers. It was a visceral, guttural sound of pure shock. Someone near the back dropped a glass bottle; it shattered loudly against the patio stones, the sound echoing like a bomb.
The aggressive, mocking chanting did not fade away; it evaporated instantly, completely obliterated by a heavy, sickening, deathly silence.
The neon pink fabric of the bikini served only to frame the catastrophic devastation of my body.
From my collarbone down to my upper thighs, wrapping around my ribs and cascading over my back, my skin was a violent, chaotic landscape of unimaginable trauma. Massive, thick, puckered keloids—raised ribbons of shiny, discolored flesh—mapped the path where third-degree burns had melted me to the bone. The skin on my left shoulder was tight and heavily grafted, resembling melted wax. A jagged, mottled purple scar slashed across my abdomen, a permanent testament to the surgeries that had saved my internal organs from systemic failure.
I wasn’t a girl in a bikini. I was a walking, breathing monument of agony.
Chloe froze at the edge of the pool. The smug, victorious smile didn’t just fade from her face; it melted off, instantly replaced by a look of sheer, uncomprehending, mind-shattering horror. Her eyes bulged, darting wildly over the ruined landscape of my torso, her brain desperately trying to process visual information that completely defied the reality she had lived in for a decade.
I didn’t cross my arms. I didn’t try to cover myself. I stood tall, my spine straight, letting the sun beat down on my scars for the first time in twelve years.
I stepped forward. I reached out and took the microphone from Chloe’s limp, paralyzed hand.
I brought the mic to my lips, looking my twin sister dead in the eye.
“You wanted to know why Mom and Dad look at me with pity, Chloe?” my voice boomed through the massive speakers, steady, piercing, and devoid of fear. “You wanted to know what my invisible disease is? You wanted me to stop hiding so everyone could see the truth?”
Chloe’s mouth opened, but she couldn’t breathe. She took a trembling step backward, nearly falling into the pool.
“It’s not a disease, Chloe,” I said, my voice ringing out over the silent, weeping crowd of teenagers. “Twelve years ago, when the old house caught fire in the middle of the night, you were terrified. You hid in your closet. A burning structural beam fell across your bedroom door, trapping you inside as the room filled with smoke.”
Chloe began to violently shake her head, her hands flying to her ears as if she could physically block the words. “No… no…”
“You don’t remember it,” I continued, refusing to let her look away, forcing the blinding light of truth into the dark corners of her amnesia. “Your mind broke to protect you from the terror. You blocked it out. But I remember. I remember waking up. I remember crawling through the suffocating gray smoke. I remember finding you screaming in the closet. And I remember the ceiling collapsing.”
Tears began to streak through the makeup on Chloe’s face.
“There was nowhere to go,” I whispered, the microphone picking up the raw emotion in my throat. “So I laid my body over yours. I pinned you to the floor, and I took the flames directly onto my own back. I burned for ten minutes, Chloe. I melted, so your skin could stay flawless. And I hid my body in heavy clothes every single day for twelve years, suffering in the heat, letting you call me a freak, so you would never, ever have to remember the smell of your own burning room.”
I dropped the microphone. It hit the concrete with a loud, final thud.
The silence that followed was the sound of a world ending…
Chapter 5: The Ashes of Vanity
“No… no, no, no!”
Chloe’s voice tore through the heavy silence of the backyard, a shrill, guttural shriek of absolute, agonizing realization. She dropped to her knees on the wet concrete, pressing the heels of her hands violently into her temples.
The mental dam that had held back the trauma for twelve years completely shattered. The repressed memories didn’t trickle back; they flooded her consciousness with the violent force of a tsunami. She remembered the blistering, suffocating heat. She remembered the blinding, stinging gray smoke filling her lungs. She remembered the terrifying, deafening crack of the wooden beam collapsing across her door.
And, most vividly, she remembered the crushing, heavy, protective weight of a small, screaming body throwing itself over hers, shielding her face from the falling embers while the world burned around them.
Chloe collapsed forward onto her hands and knees. The vanity, the cruel arrogance, the superficial entitlement that had defined her entire teenage existence was instantly, permanently incinerated. She was no longer the popular queen of the high school; she was a terrified, broken six-year-old girl waking up from a decade-long nightmare.
She crawled across the hot concrete, ignoring the scrapes on her knees, until she reached my bare feet.
The crowd of teenagers watched in stunned, weeping silence. Boys who had mocked me hours earlier were wiping tears from their faces. Girls in designer swimsuits were covering their mouths, sobbing openly, entirely ashamed of their own shallowness.
Chloe looked up at me, her flawless face completely distorted by grief and horror. She reached out with shaking, manicured hands. Her fingers, trembling violently, gently and reverently touched the thick, raised burn scars on my shins.
“I’m sorry,” Chloe wailed. Her voice tore from her throat in a ragged, ugly, beautiful sob. “Oh my god, Maya. I’m so sorry.”
She buried her face against my scarred, grafted stomach, wrapping her arms tightly around my waist. Her tears flowed freely, mixing with the sweat and the smell of chlorine, soaking into my skin.
“You burned for me,” Chloe wept, her voice muffled against my body. “You burned for me, and I hated you. I called you a freak. I tortured you. I’m a monster, Maya. I’m a monster. Please… please forgive me.”
Through the sliding glass doors, my parents finally broke. David and Sarah sprinted out of the house, pushing through the frozen crowd of teenagers. They dropped to the concrete beside us, wrapping their arms around both of their daughters in a desperate, tangled, weeping embrace.
“We’re so sorry, Maya,” my father sobbed into my shoulder, kissing the scarred skin of my back, apologizing for the decade of silence they had enforced. “We’re so sorry we made you carry this alone.”
The heavy, suffocating secret that had poisoned our family for twelve years evaporated into the summer air, carried away by the wind.
I sank to my knees on the concrete, ignoring the rough scrape against my skin. I wrapped my arms around my identical twin, pulling her tight against my chest, resting my chin on her shaking shoulder. I felt the frantic, panicked beating of her heart—a heart that was only beating because I had shielded it.
“It’s okay, Chloe,” I whispered, my own tears finally falling, hot and fast, washing away a decade of resentment. “It’s okay. You didn’t know. I love you.”
“I don’t deserve you,” Chloe cried, clutching my shoulders.
I pulled back slightly, looking into her tear-streaked face. “You’re my sister,” I said fiercely, wiping a tear from her unblemished cheek. “I would burn a thousand times to keep you safe.”
Around us, the party dissolved. My parents stood up and quietly, gently asked the guests to leave. There were no complaints. The teenagers filed out of the backyard in absolute, respectful silence, leaving their half-empty cups and inflatable toys behind.
An hour later, the backyard was entirely empty. The neon pool lights were turned off. The sun began to set, casting long, healing shadows across the patio.
The four of us sat together in the quiet, darkening living room, huddled on the sofa. We were holding hands in the quiet dark, exhausting our tears, beginning the long, arduous, beautiful process of rebuilding a sisterhood that had been forged in fire, destroyed by silence, and finally resurrected by the truth…
Chapter 6: The Braille of Survival
Two years later, the salty, crisp breeze of the California coast whipped fiercely through the open windows of our shared, off-campus college apartment.
Down on the crowded, sun-drenched beach of Santa Barbara, I laid flat on my stomach on a brightly colored beach towel, listening to the rhythmic, soothing crash of the Pacific Ocean waves.
I wasn’t wearing a heavy, suffocating fleece hoodie. I wasn’t hiding inside a thick white bathrobe. I was wearing a simple, turquoise two-piece swimsuit. The jagged, shiny burn scars that mapped my back, my shoulders, and my legs were fully exposed to the blinding sunlight, to the ocean breeze, and to the world.
I was no longer a ghost haunting my own life. I was free.
A few yards away, a group of passing teenagers, carrying surfboards and blasting music from a portable speaker, paused. One of the girls nudged her friend, pointing explicitly at the extensive, violent trauma mapping my spine. They began to whisper, their eyes wide with morbid curiosity and adolescent judgment.
Before I could even lift my head from my towel to register their stares, a shadow fell over me.
Chloe stepped directly into their line of sight, physically blocking their view of my body.
Chloe wasn’t the vain, cruel, superficial girl from the pool party anymore. She had abandoned the toxic, high-society friends who only valued aesthetics. She had spent the last two years in intense therapy, unraveling her survivor’s guilt, and dedicating her life to becoming my fiercest, most uncompromising protector.
She stood with her hands on her hips, glaring at the group of teenagers with such an aggressive, terrifying, protective intensity that they immediately looked down, their faces flushing with embarrassment, and hurried quickly down the shoreline.
Chloe knelt on the sand beside my towel. She smiled down at me, her eyes crinkling with genuine warmth.
“Idiots,” she muttered playfully, shaking her head.
She reached into her beach tote and pulled out a bottle of high-SPF sunscreen. She squeezed a large dollop of the cool, white lotion into the palms of her hands, rubbing them together to warm it.
With incredible gentleness, Chloe began to rub the lotion over my back. Her hands moved with a deep, sacred reverence over the thick, raised keloids on my shoulders and spine—the exact places that had shielded her from the collapsing, burning roof fourteen years ago. It was a deeply intimate, caring gesture, a physical apology she repeated every time we stepped into the sun. She was tending to the very scars she had once used to mock me.
“Don’t let them bother you,” Chloe whispered fiercely, leaning down to press a soft kiss into my hair. “You’re the most beautiful person on this entire beach, Maya.”
“I know,” I smiled, leaning into my sister’s gentle touch, closing my eyes and feeling the profound, healing warmth of the sun on my bare skin for the first time in my adult life.
Society had told me to hide my scars. They had told me that damaged skin was ugly, that trauma should be covered up, that perfection was the only acceptable aesthetic. For twelve years, I had believed that my body was a grotesque secret that needed to be locked away in the dark.
But as I lay on the sand, listening to the breathing of the twin sister who loved me with absolute, unwavering devotion—a sister who was only breathing because of the tissue covering my spine—I realized the profound, unassailable truth.
My scars weren’t a disfigurement at all.
They were the braille of my survival. They were a physical, undeniable love letter written in fire and flesh, proving that I had stared into the darkest, most terrifying abyss, fought the flames, and won. They were the crowns of my victory, and I would never, ever hide them again.
If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.
