webnovel

Until Fate Break Us Apart

Eirlys Williams is the child of misfortune. That’s what people always labeled her. Her abusive father killed her mother due to her infidelity with another man, creating a permanent scar in her heart. People come and go in her life, but she remains in the same place, with her indelible trauma. "You deserve to be beaten! Who made you a child born from a murderer and a sl*t?!" "Your existence itself is a sin!" "Do us a favor and go die!" She shuts her heart to deflect the pain, hurt, and sadness that constantly following her. However, to shut one's pain, means one also shut their happiness. Constant abuse throughout the years has made the girl's heart grow cold and numb. However, her brief encounters with the Gardners sparks a new page in her life. "That's very kind of you. But then, I will be worried if you go home alone." "Don't be so reckless next time! You are a girl!" "Big sister, please become my wife in the future!" She could slowly feel all of her emotions coming back to her heart. The pain, joy, sadness, hope, anger, awe, and even love. This time, she vows to protect her heart with all her might. However, the Gardners have secrets they don't want other people to know. A secret that could put Eirlys in danger. Can Eirlys overcome the hardship that comes from regaining her emotions back? This is a story of an adolescent girl, trying to find a place where she belongs. ===================== - The pic isn't mine. Credits are belong to the original artist. - English isn't my first language, so there might be lots of grammar mistakes. I apologize in advance for that! Happy reading!

PetiteSnowdrop · Teenager
Zu wenig Bewertungen
171 Chs

Chapter 120 : The importance of name

In the blink of an eye, it was lunchtime already.

I hugged my lunch to my chest as I walked out of the classroom. Usually, I would spend my time in the infirmary and have lunch with Victoria, but starting from today, I decided to change the place to the cafeteria. 

I liked to eat in peace without being stared at or badly mouthed at by people around me. That's why the cafeteria was the last place I'd pick for a lunch spot. A courtyard would be an excellent place to socialize as well, but people who usually ate there mainly were the famous students, so the hurdle was a little too high for me right now.

If I from a month ago saw me right now, indeed she would have been shocked to death. I had sworn I would never set foot in the cafeteria again after the last humiliation I received, but here I was now, determined to show my face there.