She stopped writing letters. Started noticing how he never held her hand in daylight, how his friends smirked when she passed. The fog lifted the morning she found an old photo of her grandmother—same red ribbon, same words scrawled on the back. To my little innocent. Keep our secret.
The word innocent floated back, a ghost of a whisper. She let it go. little innocent taboo
Mira burned the letters. Not with rage, but with a quiet, clean fire. The taboo wasn’t her youth or her gentleness. It was the way grown men had learned to name their hungers something holy. She walked to the pier at noon, alone, and tossed the ashes into the sea. She stopped writing letters
In the hush of a seaside town where fog rolled in like a held breath, sixteen-year-old Mira kept a secret beneath her floorboards. Not a dead thing—worse. A stack of letters tied with a red ribbon. Each one began Dear little innocent , a name her late grandmother had called her, now repurposed by Leo, the fisherman’s son. To my little innocent
Mira believed him. Until one night, his thumb traced her collarbone, and his voice dropped lower: You’re my little innocent taboo. No one else’s. And for the first time, the words felt less like a lullaby and more like a lock clicking shut.
Leo was nineteen, with salt-cracked hands and a laugh that leaned too close. He said her innocence was a "little taboo"—something precious, something that made adults uneasy. He’d whisper it when they met at the pier at midnight, trading shells and the first brush of knuckles. Don’t tell , he’d smile. They wouldn’t understand how pure this is.