In Her Shadow
My twin sister, wanting to be with her thug boyfriend, secretly planned to apply for a junior college.
When I could not talk her out of it, I told our parents and managed to stop her.
However, just a month into the new semester, her thug boyfriend cheated on her.
She left a suicide note, blaming it all on the long distance between them. She wrote that if she had gone to that junior college, her boyfriend would never have cheated.
Grief‑stricken, my parents turned all their rage on me.
"You wretched girl, this is all your fault for meddling! What business was it of yours which school your sister went to? Even if she didn't go to college, we could still support her. We didn't need your big mouth!"
"If it weren't for your spiteful tongue, your sister wouldn't be dead!"
"We were cursed to have a vicious, unfilial daughter like you!"
They locked me in her room, ordering me to repent.
Then they took her ashes on a trip, saying they wanted her to see the beautiful mountains and rivers she never got to visit in life.
A month later, they returned from their travels to find me long dead, starved to a withered husk in front of my sister's photo.
Their eyes held no grief, no guilt, only a faint, scornful curl of the lips.
In their eyes, my death was nothing more than justice served.
My broken soul saw their icy expressions, and despairing tears burned my eyes.
Then my sister's familiar voice rang out again:
"What business is it of yours which school I go to? You're just jealous that I have a boyfriend, aren't you?"