gloriousona
Penny trudged along the cracked sidewalk, her steps heavy, the ache in her legs tracing back to something far older than the long day. It clung to her bones, that exhaustion, woven into her since childhood. When other six-year-olds clutched sticky-fingered teddy bears and were kissed goodnight, Penny had learned instead to hold her breath, to tiptoe through silence, to expect nothing.
Her mother's eyes, always glassy and distant, had passed through her like she was a ghost. A daughter who might as well have been a stranger. And her father-if he'd ever loved her, he'd buried that spark so deep no one could find it. The two of them had treated her like a smudge on a freshly cleaned window: something to be scrubbed away, forgotten, resented.
She'd stopped wishing for affection before she could even spell the word. Life was no bed of roses; she'd known that before she could tie her shoes.
But inside, Penny was already bracing for that familiar chill - the way the rain seemed to wash away any illusions she still held about safety, love, or shelter. This, she thought grimly, was just one more test in a life that had offered her no guarantees and no one to catch her when she slipped.
And so she walked on, alone, swallowing the sting of the rain, her heart a fortress built on lessons learned too soon.