agirlw1thadream
The Yellowjackets knew Jennifer Hastings before the world did. Before the noise. Before the stage lights. Before the crash.
She was just a girl with a camera in her hands and songs caught somewhere deep in her throat. A girl who stayed up too late counting coins, packing lunches, braiding her little sisters' hair, learning how to be a parent long before she was ever allowed to be a child.
At night, she sang in dive bars that smelled like smoke and cheap beer, her voice already fraying at the edges. By day, she hid behind her camera, documenting everything for the school paper-drawn, always, to the Yellowjackets. To their energy. Their chaos. Their gravity.
She wasn't supposed to be part of the story.
But she got on the plane.
Nervous fingers twisting the strap of her camera, a walkman humming softly in her ears, Jennifer barely let herself breathe as the ground disappeared beneath them.
The plane went up.
And then,
it came down.
Eighteen months in the wilderness didn't just change her. It hollowed her out. Filled the empty spaces with something feral, something unrecognizable. Hunger rewired her. Survival reshaped her. The girl she had been didn't make it out.
Only the music did.
When she was rescued, the world tried to name what she became. Tried to package it, sell it, understand it.
They called it grunge.
Jennifer just called it the sound of not dying.
All rights go to the Yellowjackets writers.