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Online Shame, Real-Life Victory

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 457    |    Released on: 04/07/2025

utral, my gaze flicking from his grinning face to the camera lens, the

I said, my voic

d my phone screen away from him. My fingers flew across the

thering me in the lobby. Stil

raction of a second. He clearl

it me like a wall. It was a cheap, cloying scent that was trying too hard, jus

close to mine. The smell was stronger now, a swe

said, leaning back as far as I could i

e dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "We're g

horror, he playfully flick

e'd just granted me a huge favor. "A pre

through me. I jerked my h

uch me,"

he back of my hand, a frantic, scrubbing motion, as if I could erase his

d the comments scrollin

playing ha

e. She total

ming, how cou

ting on a show

the irresistible male lead in a cheap romance novel, the kind where the woman's 'no' is just a prelude to a 'yes'.

ro of this story. And that made

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Online Shame, Real-Life Victory
Online Shame, Real-Life Victory
“The lines of code glowed, green and satisfying. It was almost 11 PM, and I, Sarah, a data analyst by trade and a numbers person by nature, was finally done for the day. Then, a trending video popped up. My face, my building, and a headline: "Dedicated Employee or Work-Life Imbalance?" My stomach clenched. Comments flooded in, a digital deluge of pity and objectification. "Wow, she looks so plain." "Probably single. A guy could just walk up to her and she'd probably be grateful." It was disgusting. I felt watched, assessed, categorized by strangers. Unsafe. My brothers were on their way, a familiar comfort. But then, he walked in. Chad. A self-proclaimed "Good Samaritan" challenge participant, selfie stick in hand, beaming that too-perfect smile. He wanted me to be his content. I refused, but he ignored it, flicking my nose with a condescending playfulness. "A pretty girl like you shouldn't be frowning." Rage exploded inside me. I stood, demandmg he leave. With a dramatic sigh, he walked away, still filming. My phone, my lifeline, flickered and died. Just as relief washed over me, the glass doors slid open again. Chad was back. And he had a huge bouquet of roses. A sickly-sweet smell. Dizziness. He was trying to drug me. I fought, screamed, and pepper-sprayed him. But the sedative was working. I collapsed, only to see him standing there again when the elevator doors chimed open. He'd circled back. Then the security guard, Tom, appeared. Chad, with chilling precision, recited my personal details, painting me as a dramatic girlfriend in a "lover's quarrel." Tom bought it. The world went dark as I fell, not to the floor, but into Chad's arms. He whispered in my ear: "Your colleague Mark sends his regards. He didn't appreciate you reporting him to HR."”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10