A Familiar Fraud | Part One: Curiosity

I was old enough to ask questions and young enough to believe the answers would be kind. That is the danger of childhood: you hear words you donโ€™t yet understand and assume the world will meet you gently when you ask about them.

We were in a familiar house. One we visited often. Our families overlapped enough that distinctions blurred; we were told to treat each other like family. It made things feel simple. Safe, I thought.

I was still a child. Quiet. Observant. I followed older children around and asked questions without knowing some questions should never be answered by certain people.

He was older than me. Old enough to know better. Old enough to understand exactly what I didnโ€™t.
I remember the sense that we were suddenly alone, even though the house was full. At the time, I didnโ€™t understand why that mattered.

At the time, I didnโ€™t understand why that mattered.

I understand now.

When I asked what the word meant – the one Iโ€™d overheard somewhere, the one that sounded grown-up, he didnโ€™t hesitate. He didnโ€™t redirect me. He didnโ€™t protect me.

He said he could show me.

What followed wasnโ€™t loud or dramatic. There were no screams, no violence anyone would recognise from a film. There was confusion. Pressure. Groping and kissing and a body older than mine forcing closeness I didnโ€™t want and didnโ€™t understand.

There was no penetration. But there was abuse.

I didnโ€™t know that word then. I only knew my body froze and something inside me went quiet. I knew it wasnโ€™t right. I knew something had been taken without permission.

Later, I would understand the most important truth of that moment:

He knew exactly what he was doing.

Children donโ€™t ask someone else to keep watch unless they know they are doing something wrong.
I didnโ€™t tell anyone. Not because I was protecting him, but because I didnโ€™t yet know I had been harmed. Silence settled into me naturally. Life continued around the secret.

But nothing felt the same again.

He was no longer a protector. No longer familiar. I didnโ€™t have language for why – only an instinct to stay away.

That was the day innocence ended quietly.




Part 2 Coming soon…




5 responses to “A Familiar Fraud | Part One: Curiosity”

  1.  avatar
    Anonymous

    Can’t wait for part 2. Although I can see where this story is going ๐Ÿ˜ž๐Ÿ’”

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  2. A familiar fraud | Part two: Imprint – Liven Elle avatar
  3. A Familiar Fraud | Part Five: Truth – Liven Elle avatar

    […] Click here to read Part 1Click here to read Part 2Click here to read Part 3 […]

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