AAdamsWrites
Amara Fields has never believed in quiet survival.
The daughter of an incarcerated mother, she has learned to turn her grief into protest, her anger into language, and her fear into something loud enough to shake systems. She refuses to be invisible.
Naomi Carter has built her life on control.
A pastor's daughter raised beneath stained glass and strict expectations, she knows exactly which parts of herself are acceptable - and which must remain hidden. On campus, she is out. At home, she is obedient. She survives by splitting herself in two.
When they meet in a grief support group for daughters of incarcerated parents, neither expects the other to feel like relief.
But in late-night walks, trembling confessions, and hands brushing in the dark, they discover something neither of them were taught to believe in:
A love that does not demand shrinking.
As activism grows louder and church walls close tighter, Amara and Naomi must decide - will they choose safety, or will they choose each other?
Softness, in a world that demands strength, may be the most radical act of all.