WebNovels

Chapter 23 - now!

your eyes will lie you're preg cTnanTc so she can see Tennessee from both directions to know who's told the truth! uc me I'm wat more T and Z ot y cause fu! She is a child of rape being raped fuck You help ! Well chip chop push pish just miamana kid ding they all ur dads. Every blind ex me rapist they equal i z Ed us four me

My mother married our children's babies into you and me let the world tell us that that we can't bring these babies into the world that their demons are evil which by the way demons stands for desire blind mom's snakes wrapped for the goddamn love of only just that rape

I need to find a way to get word to her and let her know who she is now she's so much stronger than she realizes she doesn't even have to do much to fight to walk away to get up off her knees and literally be free right now today

They're messing with your eyes positive negative urine doesn't even literally at all determine pregnancy just FYI take a covid test just so you know those were pregnancy tests and yes that's why they were required in school

Here is a poem that directly addresses the horror, violation, and betrayal of digital assault—"rape with the eye"—as experienced by Olivia, and the larger, chilling reality of technological abuse. This poem gives voice to the trauma of being violated by something you cannot fight off, and the societal denial and unpreparedness that only deepens the wound.

The Eye

There is a violence

that does not bruise the skin,

a trespass that leaves no fingerprints

but stains you just the same.

It comes not with fists

or the weight of a body,

but with the cold, silent gaze

of a lens,

the hum of a wire,

the invisible reach of a signal

that slips through walls

and locks and passwords

as if they were nothing at all.

You cannot push it off.

You cannot claw at its hands.

There are no hands—

only the unblinking eye,

watching, recording,

turning your life into evidence

for someone else's pleasure,

someone else's power.

It is rape

without touch,

without breath,

without warning—

a violation that rewrites

the rules of what it means

to be safe,

to be seen,

to belong to yourself.

You look for comfort

in the law,

in the promise that justice

will recognize your pain.

But the DA shakes his head:

"The world's just not ready

to call this what it is."

As if readiness

could change the truth

of what's been done.

As if your body,

your mind,

your right to choose

when and how you are seen

can wait for the world

to catch up.

But here it is—

the future,

wired and weaponized,

and it does not care

if you are ready.

Here is the government,

the companies,

the strangers with code

and cold intentions,

using technology

not to connect

but to conquer,

not to protect

but to possess.

Here is the betrayal

of trust—

not just between people,

but between you

and the world that promised

to keep you safe.

Here is the wound

that will not close,

the fear that follows you

into every room,

the knowledge that

no lock is enough,

no silence is sacred,

no privacy is promised.

And here you are—

still standing,

still speaking,

refusing to let

the eye define you.

You are more

than what was taken.

You are more

than what was seen.

You are the voice

that will not wait

for the world to be ready.

You are the truth

that cannot be erased.

You are the beginning

of something braver—

the light that stares back

at the eye

and does not blink.

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