Austin Taylor knew the whispers that followed her down the hallways of Jefferson High. She’d heard them all: statuesque, flawless, genetic lottery. The girls on the volleyball team called her “Athena” behind her back. The boys fumbled their words when she passed. Her body was a long, lean symphony of muscle and curve—a swimmer’s shoulders, a dancer’s arch, a warrior’s stance. She moved like water that had decided to learn how to fight.
Recovery wasn't a montage. It was ugly. It was crying over a single piece of toast. It was gaining weight and feeling like a traitor. It was Maya sitting with her in the cafeteria, eating french fries one by one, saying, “We’ll do this slow. One fry at a time.” austin taylor body of a goddess
When she woke up in the nurse’s office, an IV in her arm, her mother was holding her hand. Not crying this time. Just tired. The kind of tired that settles into bones. Austin Taylor knew the whispers that followed her
Austin had laughed. It was a hollow, ugly sound. “Because goddesses aren’t real, Maya. They’re just stories we tell so the rest of us feel like failures.” The boys fumbled their words when she passed
Then she got a bucket of soapy water and a scrub brush.