Gia Love And Oxuanna — Envy _hot_
The breaking point came at the spring festival. Gia had spent weeks painting a mural for the town’s anniversary—a sprawling field of wildflowers under an open sky. People gathered to watch her add the final strokes. Oxuanna stood at the back of the crowd, arms crossed, chest tight with something she couldn’t name.
Instead, she stood there, staring at the mural—at the flowers Gia had painted with such care, each petal distinct. And for the first time, Oxuanna saw not Gia’s luck, but Gia’s labor. The hours. The patience. The love.
Gia Love moved through the world like a beam of sunlight—warm, steady, impossible to ignore. She didn’t try to be the center of attention; she simply was . Her laugh came easily, her kindness was instinctive, and people naturally gravitated toward her. At seventeen, she had everything: a close-knit family, loyal friends, and a quiet confidence that needed no validation. gia love and oxuanna envy
That night, after everyone had gone home, Oxuanna returned to the square. She carried a can of black paint. Her hand shook as she pried the lid off. She doesn’t deserve this, Oxuanna told herself. No one works that hard and stays that happy. It’s fake. It has to be.
Oxuanna’s throat tightened. “I didn’t think you’d care.” The breaking point came at the spring festival
The next morning, Gia found a small note tucked beneath the mural’s frame. It read: I wanted to ruin this. I’m sorry. —O.
It wasn’t an instant fix. Envy doesn’t vanish with one apology or one orange. But something shifted. Oxuanna started showing up to art club. She stopped comparing her drafts to Gia’s finished pieces. And Gia, in turn, learned that her light could illuminate, not blind—if she was careful to look for the people standing just outside its warmth. Oxuanna stood at the back of the crowd,
Oxuanna, by contrast, lived in the shadow of that glow. She and Gia had been friends once, in the careless way of childhood, before envy took root. Oxuanna was sharp-tongued and quick to feel slighted. Where Gia saw abundance, Oxuanna saw scarcity—as if every smile Gia received was one stolen from her.
The breaking point came at the spring festival. Gia had spent weeks painting a mural for the town’s anniversary—a sprawling field of wildflowers under an open sky. People gathered to watch her add the final strokes. Oxuanna stood at the back of the crowd, arms crossed, chest tight with something she couldn’t name.
Instead, she stood there, staring at the mural—at the flowers Gia had painted with such care, each petal distinct. And for the first time, Oxuanna saw not Gia’s luck, but Gia’s labor. The hours. The patience. The love.
Gia Love moved through the world like a beam of sunlight—warm, steady, impossible to ignore. She didn’t try to be the center of attention; she simply was . Her laugh came easily, her kindness was instinctive, and people naturally gravitated toward her. At seventeen, she had everything: a close-knit family, loyal friends, and a quiet confidence that needed no validation.
That night, after everyone had gone home, Oxuanna returned to the square. She carried a can of black paint. Her hand shook as she pried the lid off. She doesn’t deserve this, Oxuanna told herself. No one works that hard and stays that happy. It’s fake. It has to be.
Oxuanna’s throat tightened. “I didn’t think you’d care.”
The next morning, Gia found a small note tucked beneath the mural’s frame. It read: I wanted to ruin this. I’m sorry. —O.
It wasn’t an instant fix. Envy doesn’t vanish with one apology or one orange. But something shifted. Oxuanna started showing up to art club. She stopped comparing her drafts to Gia’s finished pieces. And Gia, in turn, learned that her light could illuminate, not blind—if she was careful to look for the people standing just outside its warmth.
Oxuanna, by contrast, lived in the shadow of that glow. She and Gia had been friends once, in the careless way of childhood, before envy took root. Oxuanna was sharp-tongued and quick to feel slighted. Where Gia saw abundance, Oxuanna saw scarcity—as if every smile Gia received was one stolen from her.