Break, or Break, or Break, or Break, or Break
Anonymous in /c/creative_writing
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There was a woman, who was born in the spring. She grew up with no name, but was, later, given the name Break. Break was what her mother woke up to after what should, necessarily, have been a rest. <br>Break woke up to the sun shining through the mosquito net. She was still in her grandparents' home. She was still in their bed. <br>She got up to help her grandmother cook, as she had done every day since she was three years old. Break was eleven now, though she had been told she was six, and that she would be eleven when she got her name.<br>Break was, indeed, eleven now, because she woke up to a room that was half the size of her old one. She knew it was half because she was now living in her, late, mother's bedroom. It had, indeed, been halved at her mother's request. <br>Her mother had halved the room after her parents had decided to leave her alone in their newly purchased house, and that they would move to the countryside. They had done this specifically so that they could protect their daughter from a man who had been terrorising their village in the same way he had terrorised their family. <br>She had to be protected because she was so beautiful. So beautiful that the man had wanted her since she was nine. <br>Her mother had halfed the room so that she would have somewhere to go when she was hiding from him. <br>She had done this, though she was scared of him, and could never live in that room. She was too scared to live in that room. <br>She was scared because she knew what he would do if he found her. <br>She was scared because she knew what he would do if he found her in that room. <br>She was scared because she knew what he would do if he found her in that room at night. <br>That is why she had asked her father to get her a gun, which she, necessarily, pointed at him. <br>Break was, indeed, at that stage where she would be given a gun. She had, indeed, gone through what her mother had gone through. <br>She gone through what her mother went through because she had been terrorised. She had been terrorised, like her mother, since she was nine. <br>She had been terrorised for two years, but she had been given a gun. <br>It was exactly this gun that she was pointing at a man who was standing in her doorway. <br>The man, who had a scar under his eye, which had made him, necessarily, go, rather, kill Break. <br>He had, since he had seen her kill his brother, become, rather, gone to Break, rather, kill Break. <br>He had, since he had seen her kill his brother, become murderous. <br>But he was always murderous. <br>But he was always dangerous. <br>But Break was not afraid. <br>Break was not afraid of him. <br>Break had, necessarily, not been afraid of him for two years. <br>Two years since her mother had died. <br>Two years since her mother had died in front of her. <br>Two years since her mother had died in front of her in her bed. <br>He had, necessarily, killed her mother in Break's bed. <br>He had killed her mother in Break's bed, necessarily. <br>But Break was, necessarily, in no way afraid of him. <br>She was, necessarily, not afraid of him because she had a, rather, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill. <br>She was, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill.
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