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Chapter 2

Author: Rotten Tomato
At 6:30 a.m., the front door slammed shut. The house fell back into a dead silence.

To save twenty cents on the bus fare, Mother had left half an hour early, walking to the labor market.

At 9:00 a.m., sunlight slipped through the poorly drawn curtains and fell across the corpse's bluish lips.

My phone screen lit up. It was a reminder from the hospital.

[Charles Woodburn, your follow-up appointment is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. today. Please arrive on time.]

No one saw it.

At 10:15 a.m., my mother returned.

She collapsed onto the sofa, staring blankly at the crumpled admission letter Stephanie had thrown away the night before, still lying on the coffee table.

Then she noticed the bowl of porridge sitting outside my door.

"Damn it all," she muttered.

She picked up the bowl meant for me, tilted her head back, and gulped it down in a few swallows.

Her phone rang. She answered.

"Hello? Is this Charles's parent?"

"Yes. What has he done now?" Her hand tightened instinctively around the receiver.

"This is the National High School Physics Competition Committee. We need to verify something. Charles has applied to forfeit his guaranteed admission and has transferred the special award of 5,000 dollars into Stephanie Woodburn's account. Was this authorized by the family?"

Her hand trembled. The phone nearly slipped from her grasp.

"How much did you say?"

"Five thousand dollars. The transfer was executed this morning."

Mother hung up.

Slowly, stiffly, she turned her head and stared at my tightly shut door.

Then she rushed forward and twisted the handle hard.

"Charles! Where did you send that money?" She pounded on the door. "Open up! Explain yourself! Have you lost your mind? That money was for your treatment! How could you give it to Stephanie?"

Her voice sharpened, rising into a shriek. "Are you trying to ruin this family?"

She began slamming her shoulder against the door.

Suddenly, the front door burst open. Stephanie ran in, breathless.

"Mom! Stop!" She rushed forward and grabbed her.

"Why are you back?" Mother shook her off. "Charles transferred the money to your account? Transfer it back now! We need to pay our debts!"

"It's not about the money!" Stephanie raised her phone, her face ashen. "I got the message too, but I just checked Charles's location…"

She pointed to the "Family Anti-Loss Tracking System" on the screen. The red dot that represented me was still in the bedroom. And the heart rate monitor showed: —.

That meant the wristband had been removed… or the heartbeat had stopped.

"Charles hasn't moved since last night." Stephanie's voice trembled.

Mother froze.

Her eyes fell on the ten-dollar bill still lying where Stephanie had pushed it under the door.

A vast, icy fear finally crushed the anxiety over money.

She took a step back and looked at the door.

I looked at her too.

Mother raised her leg and, with all her strength, kicked at the lock.

The door flew open.

The instant it gave way, a stale wave of air rushed out. The smell of a sealed room overnight—mixed with the sour stench of vomit. The smell of death.

Mother froze in the posture of her kick. Stephanie ducked under her arm and rushed inside.

"Charles?" she called tentatively.

I hovered above them, watching it all.

My body lay there on its side, back to the door. The posture looked natural—like I was just sleeping in, as usual.

On the nightstand, the phone vibrated again, its glow lighting a small patch of the room.

Buzz—buzz—

A message from Jamie popped up: [Bro, I listed your game account. Someone's offering fifty dollars. Should I sell it?]
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  • Guilt of Burden   Chapter 9

    "Nonsense!"Mother slammed her fork onto the table. "Charles traded his life for that money, and you won't study?""I can't!" Jamie shouted. "Every time I open a book, I see his face! Spending this money—it burns my hands!""Even if it burns, you'll spend it!"Mother shot to her feet, grabbed him by the collar, and hauled him up from his chair."Is this money dirty? It's your brother's blood! If you don't use it, then he died for nothing!"Her eyes were bloodshot, like a lioness driven into a corner."From today on, if either of you dares to say you won't study, dares to say you'll go work instead, I'll die right in front of you! Then we'll cheat another insurance payout while we're at it!"Jamie broke down. A boy nearly six feet tall, crying like an infant.Stephanie silently picked up a slice of pot roast and placed it on his plate, then another for Mother.Finally, she picked up a slice and set it on the plate before the empty seat. My seat."Mom, Jamie will study," Steph

  • Guilt of Burden   Chapter 8

    Jonathan frowned, trying to pull his leg free."Mrs. Woodburn, please compose yourself. The chain of evidence is quite complete.""What evidence?!"Stephanie rushed in, clutching a thick notebook.It was my physics problem book, crammed with dense formulas."Look at this!" She flipped to the last page and pointed to a single line written in red ink.[Goal: Tonnereine University, Department of Physics. Starting next Monday, quit gaming and go all-in!]The handwriting was mine.But I had never written those words.I leaned closer. Stephanie had imitated my script. It was a little shaky, but in the heat of the moment, no one would notice."Charles was preparing for university!" Stephanie cried. "When he said he was going somewhere far, he meant Tonnereine! He sold his account to cut off distractions! How could he have wanted to die? He just won a gold medal!"She slammed the notebook against Jonathan's chest."Look at these problems! Someone who solved over a thousand question

  • Guilt of Burden   Chapter 7

    Mother glanced at Jamie. He stood in the doorway like a guard."There's a password," he said."Unlock it," Jonathan replied. "As part of the claims review, we need to rule out suicidal intent. Browser history, journals, chat logs—those are all evidence."Jamie didn't move."You don't have to unlock it," Jonathan said evenly. "In that case, the claim will be suspended indefinitely until the family cooperates."Mother shoved him. "Open it for him!"Jaw clenched, Jamie stepped forward and entered the password.The screen lit up.The desktop was cluttered—PDFs of physics problems everywhere.Jonathan sat down and opened the browser with practiced ease. The history was completely blank."Wiped clean." He glanced back at Jamie. "When did you delete it?""Yesterday," Jamie said without changing expression. "My brother died. It upset Mom, so she had me clear everything.""Including the system logs?" Jonathan let out a faint, humorless laugh and began typing rapidly.He was restori

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    I drifted into the furnace. The flames passed through my spirit—no heat, only a tearing sensation that felt almost like release.All the illness, the suffocation, and the despair were gone in an instant.Half an hour later, Jamie came out holding a cheap white plastic box. It was still warm."Charles is so light," he muttered.Mother said nothing. She was staring at her phone.A new message had just come in: [XX Insurance] Your claim has been received. An investigator will visit within three business days for verification.The real judgment was only just beginning.The next morning, at 9:00 a.m., a knock came, right on time. Not a frantic pounding, but three measured taps.Mother took a deep breath and smoothed the stray hairs at her temples. She had changed into the only white shirt in the house without holes.She opened the door.A man in his thirties stood outside. He wore a black suit and held a briefcase. He had eyes like a hawk."Jonathan Beller, insurance investigator

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    "Charles said he felt awful… said he wanted to die. I—I was scared he'd do something stupid, so I looked things up online—how to talk him out of it, how serious it was." Jamie didn't even dare blink as he lied. "That insurance… I clicked into it from a news push."The officer narrowed his eyes, studying the high schooler."Then where are the pill bottles?" he asked. "In a depression patient's room, how is there no medication?"It was a fatal gap.Mother's breathing nearly stopped."Here."Stephanie pulled three bottles from her schoolbag.They were the extra prescriptions I'd asked her to pick up from another pharmacy yesterday, to make up a lethal dose. Still unopened."Yesterday, my brother asked me to buy these for him. I… I forgot to give them to him." Stephanie held up the full bottles, tears spilling down her face. "If I'd given them to him sooner… would he not have…?"The logic didn't hold. The emotion did.The officer fell silent for a moment.There were no signs of

  • Guilt of Burden   Chapter 4

    Mother's hand cracked across Jamie's face.It was a brutal blow. Blood welled at the corner of his mouth almost instantly."What do you know?" she shouted, her tears finally breaking loose. "Do you think I wanted him to die? This money… he traded his life for it—for you!""Don't touch him." She drew a sharp breath, wiped her tears, and when she looked up again, her eyes were terrifyingly steady. "Stephanie, go shut the front door. Jamie, get a towel and wipe your brother's mouth clean.""Mom?" Stephanie stared at her, horrified."There's a clause in the insurance policy." Mother's voice trembled, but every word was painfully clear. "Suicide… if it happens within two years, there's no payout. This policy's only been in place for a year and a half."I hovered in the air, stunned. I had forgotten that clause.Mother fixed her gaze on my body, as if she could see through it, through me."It can't be suicide," she said. "He took the wrong medication. Or it was a heart attack. Do you

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