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My Broken Bond, Their Unending Pain Novel Cover

My Broken Bond, Their Unending Pain

After our parents died, my brothers were my protectors. That ended the day they brought home Faye, a fourteen-year-old orphan they treated like a fragile doll, while I became part of the furniture. They gave her my vintage saxophone, my promised trip to Paris, and dismissed my symphony-my life' s work-as "noise." The final betrayal happened in the library. Faye deliberately tore my master score to shreds. When I tried to stop her, she faked an injury, and my brothers took her side without hesitation. "You are a jealous, manipulative child," Clinton spat, before burning the rest of my symphony in front of my eyes. They told me to get out of their lives. So I did. I accepted a ten-year isolated fellowship and vanished. Now, I've returned as a world-renowned composer whose work saved millions. When my brothers, broken by regret, finally found me and begged me to come home, I gave them a calm, professional smile. "I'm sorry," I said. "Do I know you?"
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Chapter 2

The door clicked shut behind me, the sound a faint echo of the finality I felt in my bones. I didn't look back. I just walked, the cold winter air biting at my exposed skin. I heard the muffled sounds of renewed laughter from inside the house, the tinkling of Faye's giggles, the deep resonance of my brothers' voices. My absence had clearly restored their festive cheer.

I got in my car, my injured hand still pressed against my thigh. The blood had dried, a sticky crust against my skin. I started the engine, the rumble a comforting thrum in the suffocating silence of my own thoughts.

Later that day, an email notification popped up on my phone. It was from Professor Middleton, a reminder about the fellowship application. "The deadline is approaching, Clara. This is your chance."

I returned to my small, temporary room at the university dorms. It felt more like a home than the grand house I had just left. I worked late into the night, the symphony playing in my head, the notes a balm to my aching heart. I immersed myself in the complex harmonies, the intricate counterpoints. This was my world. This was where I belonged.

The next morning, I was in the university library, surrounded by stacks of scores, lost in my work. My phone vibrated. A text from a mutual friend. A picture. It was of Faye, Clinton, and Edgar. They were in Paris.

My breath hitched. The Eiffel Tower sparkled in the background. Faye was beaming, holding a tiny macaroon. Clinton and Edgar stood on either side of her, their arms around her, their smiles wide and genuine. A warmth I had longed for, a joy I had been denied.

I felt a sudden, sharp pain, a constriction in my chest, making it hard to breathe. I pushed away from the table, needing air. Water. I needed water.

I walked to the fountain in the center of the library, the cool water doing little to soothe the burning in my throat. When I returned, Faye was sitting at my table. She held my master score, the only physical copy of my symphony, in her hands.

My heart leaped into my throat. "Faye, what are you doing?" I asked, my voice a strangled whisper. "Put that down. It's important."

She looked up, her eyes wide and innocent. "Oh, Clara! I was just looking. It's so pretty." Her fingers, those fragile, piano-playing fingers, were already tracing the ink on the page.

"Please, Faye. Give it back," I pleaded, my voice rising. "It's the only copy."

"Only copy?" Clinton's voice boomed from behind me. He and Edgar had appeared, drawn by the commotion. "Why would you only have one copy, Clara? That's irresponsible."

Before I could answer, Faye's eyes, those innocent, wide eyes, narrowed almost imperceptibly. A tiny, cruel smile touched her lips. Then, she tore the page. Slowly. Deliberately. The sound of ripping paper was deafening in the silent library.

My vision blurred. No. Not the symphony. Not my ticket out.

"Faye!" I cried, lunging forward.

But Faye, with an almost theatrical flourish, let out a small shriek and stumbled backward, her elbow hitting the corner of the table. She cried out, a high, piercing sound, clutching her arm.

"My God, Faye!" Clinton roared, his face turning a dangerous shade of red. He pushed me aside with a force that sent me sprawling. "What have you done, Clara?"

"I didn't do anything!" I yelled, scrambling to my feet. "She ripped it! She ripped my symphony!"

Edgar was already kneeling beside Faye, his voice a soothing murmur. "Shh, little bird. It's okay. Are you hurt?"

"She... she attacked me," Faye sobbed, her innocent eyes wide with fake tears. "I just wanted to look at her music, and she got so angry! She hated that I even touched it because it's so precious to her." Her tears were a weapon, sharp and effective.

"Precious?" Clinton scoffed, his face contorted in disgust as he picked up the torn page. "This amateurish scribbling? It's hardly worth the paper it's printed on, Clara. You' re overreacting."

"It's my life's work!" I screamed, tears finally blurring my vision. "It's the application for my fellowship! The only way out of here!"

"A fellowship?" Edgar sneered, rising to his feet, his arm still around Faye. "To go where, Clara? To compose more 'noise'? You think you're some kind of musical genius? Faye is the prodigy here. The real talent. Not you."

"She's a jealous, unstable girl, Clinton," Edgar continued, his arm tightening around Faye. "Always has been. Trying to sabotage Faye's happiness, just like she tried to ruin Christmas."

"I... I swear I didn't," I choked out, pointing at the torn score. "She did it deliberately!"

Clinton snatched the torn pages from my hand. "Deliberately? She's fourteen, Clara! A child! You're the one who can't control her temper. This is what happens when you get too possessive over your little hobbies." He crumpled the remaining pages of my symphony, my dreams, my future, into a tight ball.

"This is a lesson, Clara," Clinton said, his voice cold and hard, a judge delivering a verdict. "You want to push away everyone who cares about you? Fine. But don't expect us to tolerate your destructive behavior. You are no longer welcome here. Get out. Get out of this library. Get out of our lives."

"Clinton, no..." Edgar began, a flicker of uncertainty in his eyes, but Clinton cut him off with a chilling glare.

"She has to learn, Edgar. This is for her own good."

My heart hammered against my ribs, a trapped bird desperate to escape. I looked at the crumpled ball in Clinton's hand. My symphony. My ticket. Gone.

My brothers turned, leading Faye away, her sobs echoing in the cavernous library. No one looked back. Not even Faye.

I stood there, surrounded by the silent witnesses of books, the torn remnants of my work scattered on the floor. My hands trembled. My legs felt like jelly. I was alone. Utterly, completely alone. All my life, I had longed for their love, their approval. I had tried to be good, to be worthy. But it was never enough. I was just the "noise," the inconvenience, the jealous sister.

They thought they had destroyed me. They thought they had extinguished the last flicker of hope. But something else was sparking inside me now. A cold, hard resolve. A fire. Not of anger, but of absolute, chilling indifference.

I looked down at the torn pages, then at the fellowship application still open on my laptop screen. It asked for a complete, original symphony. A master copy. Now, I had nothing.

"Are you okay, Clara?" a soft voice asked. I looked up. It was Bailey Wong, a fellow composer, whose desk was nearby. His eyes held genuine concern. He had witnessed everything.

I didn't answer him. I couldn't. My voice was gone. My tears were gone. All that remained was a vast, empty space.

I bent down, slowly, painstakingly, and picked up each torn fragment of paper. My symphony. My blood, sweat, and tears. Destroyed.

I looked at the crumpled ball of paper in my hand. Then, I looked at the open fellowship application. There was no going back. They had made sure of that. They had eradicated me from their lives. Now, I would eradicate them from mine.

I walked out of the library, the ruined symphony clutched in my hand. I didn't need their approval. I didn't need their love. All I needed was to disappear. And they would never see me again.

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