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Love Letter, Public Shame

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 748    |    Released on: 03/07/2025

m sto

is inappropriate. If there's a disciplinary issue with my d

urmur of agreement started to build. For a s

olling a room. She held up a hand, sile

s no longer a private matter. This is about the culture of our school. This is about protecting

st as an opposition to the school's well-being. My mom, fluste

voice losing its patient facade. It wa

with sand. I kept my eyes on the floor as I walked down the aisle, the silence in the auditorium a roaring in my ea

anded me the letter. The paper

she said, her voice a sickly sweet whispe

e dark sea of faces, a faceless mob waiting for their entertainment. I unfolde

trembling thing wh

rcing the words out. "Chloe, I don't know if I'll ever have the courage to say this

like a violation, like I was tearing open

get to a good part. I see you in the cafeteria, sharing your lunch with Sarah when she forgets hers. I see you in chemistry class

n't the salacious, gossip-worthy confession they were expect

ng according to her script. She had expected something crude,

ttacked

forward an

ow this happens? The distraction. The obsession. While this young man should have been focusing on his own chemistry homework, he was inst

turning his quiet affectio

" she proclaimed, her voice filled with manufactured passion. "The kind of behavior I would nev

failure, while unknowingly boasting about the author himself. The irony was suffocating. She held up her so

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Love Letter, Public Shame
Love Letter, Public Shame
“The crumpled note in my locker felt like a ticking time bomb. It was a love letter, addressed to me, Chloe, from a handwriting I didn't recognize. But before I could even process it, Principal Albright, hawk-eyed and always on the prowl, spotted a corner peeking from my pocket. "What is that, Ms. Davis?" she demanded, her voice cutting through the hall. I was caught, forced to hand over the painfully private confession. She read it, her face hardening into a mask of disgust, then folded it neatly and tucked it into her own pocket. "My office. After school," she said, her heels clicking like a death knell. Dread coiled in my stomach, but a sliver of relief, too-at least it would be private. I was wrong. Ms. Albright, perched behind her mahogany desk like a queen on her throne, deemed the letter "poetic" and "overly emotional," a "distraction" that derailed "promising students." Then she dropped the bomb: I would be reading it aloud, for everyone, at the Parent-Teacher Meeting tomorrow night. It wasn't a choice; it was a command, a public shaming she framed as a "teachable moment." My blood ran cold. Her voice, now dripping with self-righteous conviction, painted the letter as a "serious problem," a "symptom of a lack of focus," a "derailment of academic career." She demanded I not only read it, but identify the author. She was turning a tender, private sentiment into a weapon, attempting to break me and publicly humiliate some anonymous boy. But Ms. Albright, so certain in her rigid worldview, had no idea just how spectacularly her plan was about to backfire. She had no idea that the "problem" boy she wanted to expose, the one whose heartfelt words she was about to use as a performance of moral superiority, was her own son. Ethan Albright. Her perfect, valedictorian, star-athlete son.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10