The Love Built On Silent Lies

The Love Built On Silent Lies

Gavin

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For ten years, my world was silent. Bryan was my protector, my voice, my everything, shielding me from a world I couldn't hear after my parents died saving him. But when a new girl, Astrid, arrived and started a cruel war against me, I suddenly regained my hearing-only to discover the horrifying truth. Bryan wasn't my protector; he was the mastermind. "He loves seeing you squirm," Astrid sneered, her voice a venomous whisper I could now hear perfectly. "He told me he gets off on it. He hates your blank face." Their twisted game was to make the "emotionless Elinor" cry. My pain was their entertainment. The boy I trusted, the family I loved-it was all built on a foundation of guilt and deceit. He thought I was a silent, helpless victim he could control. He thought I would endure his betrayal forever. He was wrong. So, I jumped from the third-floor window, orchestrating a public "suicide" to expose their crimes. As the world erupted in chaos and his perfect life shattered, I knew my real story was just beginning.

Chapter 1

For ten years, my world was silent. Bryan was my protector, my voice, my everything, shielding me from a world I couldn't hear after my parents died saving him.

But when a new girl, Astrid, arrived and started a cruel war against me, I suddenly regained my hearing-only to discover the horrifying truth. Bryan wasn't my protector; he was the mastermind.

"He loves seeing you squirm," Astrid sneered, her voice a venomous whisper I could now hear perfectly. "He told me he gets off on it. He hates your blank face."

Their twisted game was to make the "emotionless Elinor" cry. My pain was their entertainment. The boy I trusted, the family I loved-it was all built on a foundation of guilt and deceit.

He thought I was a silent, helpless victim he could control. He thought I would endure his betrayal forever.

He was wrong.

So, I jumped from the third-floor window, orchestrating a public "suicide" to expose their crimes. As the world erupted in chaos and his perfect life shattered, I knew my real story was just beginning.

Chapter 1

Elinor POV:

The whisper started in the hall, a buzzing hum of voices that vibrated through the floorboards and up into my chest. It felt like a low growl, a sound I barely registered anymore, but the sharp flick of light caught my eye. Astrid Nolan, the new girl, stood in the middle of the cafeteria, her bright red hair a beacon in the dull afternoon. She was looking at Bryan. Everyone was.

Astrid's voice cut through the noise, a sharp, clear sound that somehow pierced the quiet I usually lived in. "Bryan Knox," she declared, her arms thrown wide like she was on a stage. "I like you. A lot."

My lunch tray felt heavy in my hands, a dead weight. I watched Bryan, his face a mask of surprise, then something colder. His gaze flickered to me, a quick, almost imperceptible glance, before settling back on Astrid.

"You're trash," Bryan said, his voice flat, devoid of any warmth. The words hung in the air, heavy and brutal. "Elinor is pure. You're nothing like her."

A gasp rippled through the crowd. Astrid's bright smile vanished, replaced by a dark, simmering rage. Her eyes, usually sparkling with mischief, turned cold and hard. She stepped closer to Bryan, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper that still somehow made the hair on my arms stand up. "You'll regret that, Bryan Knox." Then her gaze landed on me, a venomous stare that promised destruction. "And you," she mouthed, a silent threat that screamed louder than any spoken word.

Before Astrid could move, Bryan was already there, a wall between us. He didn't touch me, but his presence was a shield. His hand went to his own chest, a familiar sign for "mine," then he jabbed a finger at Astrid, a clear warning. It was a gesture I knew, a gesture that had always made me feel safe. For a moment, the heavy weight in my chest lifted.

The cafeteria monitor, Mr. Harrison, a man with a perpetually tired face, finally stepped in. Astrid received a day of in-school suspension for "disrupting lunch service and verbal aggression." It felt like a small win, a temporary reprieve. But I knew better. Astrid wasn't the type to back down.

From that day on, the school hallways became a battlefield. Astrid made it her mission to torment Bryan, and by extension, me. She'd trip him in the hall, "accidentally" spill water on his books, or leave crude drawings on his locker. It was childish, but relentless.

Every time, Bryan retaliated, his actions escalating with hers. He'd "forget" her name in class, publicly correct her grammar in front of everyone, or even once, in a fit of rage, poured her expensive latte down the drain. Their war was loud, public, and exhausting.

Then, the focus shifted. It became about me. Astrid started leaving anonymous notes in my locker, cruel drawings of a girl with a gagged mouth, or pictures of flames. They were always hidden, always meant only for me. I'd find them, my breath catching in my throat, and then stuff them deep into my bag, pretending I hadn't seen a thing.

One afternoon, I was walking to the art room, a place that usually felt like a sanctuary. The hallway was empty, the light dim. Suddenly, I was shoved into a supply closet. The door slammed shut, plunging me into darkness. I could hear Astrid's voice, muffled but unmistakable, right outside. "Look at her, the little mute freak. Can't even scream for help." Laughter, cold and sharp, followed her words. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. I pressed myself against the dusty shelves, trying to disappear.

The door burst open with a crash, flooding the closet with light. Bryan stood there, his face contorted with a fury I had rarely seen. He grabbed Astrid by the arm, his fingers digging into her skin. "I told you to leave her alone!" he roared, his voice echoing in the empty hall. He shoved her away from the door, so hard she stumbled back, hitting the lockers with a clang.

Astrid laughed then, a high, unsettling sound. Her eyes, bright with a dangerous glint, met mine over Bryan's shoulder. "He protects you so well," she sneered, her voice dripping with mock sweetness. "Like a loyal dog. But tell me, Elinor, does he protect you from me when we're alone?" My stomach dropped. The implication hit me like a physical blow.

Bryan turned, his hand reaching for me, his face softened with concern. But I saw it then, on Astrid' s neck, a faint red mark, a hickey. It screamed of an intimacy, a betrayal, that punched the air right out of my lungs. My entire world, the one Bryan had meticulously built around me, crumbled into dust.

A blinding pain ripped through my head, a sharp, metallic clang that made me double over. My ears, for years sealed in a profound silence, suddenly roared with a cacophony of sound. The fluorescent lights hummed, the distant shouts of kids in the gym, the pounding of my own blood in my ears – it was a brutal, overwhelming symphony. My body stiffened, every nerve ending screaming in protest.

I stared at Bryan, the boy who had taught me to sign, who had been my voice and my shield for a decade. The realization hit me with the force of a tidal wave: his gaze, once so devoted, now held a subtle shift, a flicker of something I couldn't quite name. It was like watching a familiar landscape slowly, imperceptibly change before your eyes, rendering it alien. He was no longer mine. He was no longer ours.

"You keep your distance from her," Bryan's voice was raw, a low growl I could now hear. He was speaking to Astrid, but his words were meant to reassure me. It was a hollow comfort, a lie I could now decode.

Astrid's voice, an annoying high-pitched whine that grated on my newly awakened senses, reached me. "Oh, Benny-boo," she purred, her tone sickeningly sweet. "Don't you worry about your sweet little mute. She won't know a thing."

Then, a soft, wet sound. A gasp escaped my throat, though no sound came out. It was a kiss. A deep, wet, intimate kiss. And then, the unmistakable sound of their breathing, ragged and desperate, filled the space between us. My stomach churned. The betrayal was like a vile taste in my mouth, burning my throat.

"That was fun," Astrid whispered, her voice laced with satisfaction. "Next time, let's really make her cry."

"Don't push it," Bryan mumbled, his voice muffled. "Don't ruin the game." The words were a physical blow, a chilling confirmation of my worst fears.

The newly returned sounds of the world were a torment. Every rustle of clothing, every breath, every whispered word was a cacophony of pain. My head throbbed. I closed my eyes, wishing for the familiar silence, the comforting void that had once protected me. It was a terrible, suffocating feeling, like being trapped in a room filled with static.

Bryan' s hand reached out, his fingers brushing my arm. It was a familiar gesture, his usual way of comforting me after one of Astrid's attacks. But this time, I flinched, pulling away as if his touch burned me.

He paused, his brows furrowed in confusion. He signed, Are you okay? The familiar signs, once a lifeline, now felt like a cruel mockery. He tried again, Elinor, what's wrong? His expression was a mix of concern and bewilderment.

His concern, once a warm blanket, now felt like a flimsy excuse, a performance for an audience of one. How many times had he "comforted" me after orchestrating my pain? How many times had I melted into his embrace, believing in his protection, while he was the one pulling the strings? The irony was a bitter pill.

I remembered when he first started learning sign language, his clumsy fingers fumbling with the shapes, his brow furrowed in concentration. He'd spent hours, days, weeks, just to speak to me, to be my link to the world. He was my protector, my voice, my everything. Now, those same hands were complicit in my torment.

The memory of the fire flashed in my mind, a searing image of orange and red, the roar of flames, the screams. My parents, running into the inferno to save Bryan, their last act to protect him, to give him a future. A future he was now squandering, spitting on, by turning my pain into a game. The guilt that bound us, the debt he supposedly carried, had become a currency for cruelty.

I looked at Bryan, then down at his neck. The faint red mark of Astrid's kiss was still there, a cruel brand. It was a silent testament, a physical manifestation of his betrayal, mocking the sacred bond we once shared.

I held up my phone, typing furiously with trembling fingers. I want to report Astrid. To the principal. The police. My thumb hovered over the send button, my resolve hardening.

He reached out, grabbing my wrist with a firm grip, stopping me. He shook his head, his eyes pleading. No. Don't.

He signed, Astrid will get expelled. Her parents will be furious. It will ruin her. His worry was plastered on his face, but it wasn't for me. It was for her. The realization hit me hard. He cared more about Astrid's future than about my suffering, my desperate plea for justice.

It's nothing, Elinor. He signed, his voice an echo of the condescending words I' d just heard. Kids are just being kids. You're overreacting. His words were dismissive, a casual wave of his hand sweeping away my pain, my trauma, as if it were dust.

His eyes narrowed, a flicker of impatience in their depths. Why are you making this harder? Just forget it. Be good. His tone was sharp, an order, not a request. He was tired of my "drama," tired of my silent suffering.

It's for your own good, he signed, a lame excuse I could now hear for the manipulative lie it was. Trust me. He actually had the gall to use those words.

Come on, he signed, trying to pull me towards the door, away from the scene, away from the truth. Let's go home. He was trying to control the situation, to sweep it under the rug, just like he always did.

My heart hardened. No, Bryan. It was a silent rebellion, a quiet roar. I wouldn' t be silenced anymore. Not by him. Not by anyone.

But on the outside, I remained passive. My body moved as he directed, a puppet on his strings, but my mind was already plotting my escape. My hands dropped to my sides, an empty gesture of compliance.

As we walked out, Astrid was there, leaning against the lockers, a smirk on her face. She blew a kiss to Bryan, a blatant, provocative gesture meant to humiliate me. He ignored her, but I saw the faint flush on his cheeks.

Later, in English class, the final exam sat before me. I stared at the blank page, my mind racing. A small, crumpled piece of paper landed on my desk. I picked it up. It was a cheat sheet, covered in tiny, cramped writing. My heart lurched. This wasn't mine.

"Elinor Hewitt is cheating!" Astrid's voice, loud and clear, sliced through the quiet of the exam room. Everyone turned. My eyes met Bryan's across the room. His face was pale, his eyes wide with a mixture of shock and dawning comprehension. He knew. He knew Astrid had set me up.

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