Buried in His Shadow
My brother, Theo Sorento, died in a plane crash on his way back home just to celebrate my birthday. They never found his body—only wreckage. Ever since, my parents forced me to kneel in front of his grave every year on my birthday, demanding that I repent for surviving when he didn’t.
Then came my eighteenth birthday.
I realized someone was following me. Panicked, I sent a few messages asking for help. Just then, Mom called, not to check on me but to lash out.
“I know exactly what you're doing. You’re just making up excuses so you don’t have to kneel in front of your brother’s grave! You’re a liar. Why wasn’t it you who died instead of him? You’re a walking curse!”
Before my phone was smashed under a boot, the last thing I heard was the cold click of her hanging up.
Then, I was cut up into pieces, and what was left of me was tossed across the city. My father, the lead forensic pathologist on my case, didn’t even recognize me.
Later, Theo returned alive with his wife, whom he had eloped with eight years ago.
When they found out the pile of rotting flesh was me, they all went insane.