What if never breaking a bone meant something more than just luck?Disclaimer: This story is a work of fiction. It is not based on real events. Photos are for illustrative purposes only.I always thought it was just luck.No broken bones—not even a sprain. I played rough as a kid—jumped off rooftops, crashed my bike, tumbled down stairs—but somehow, I always walked away without a scratch. People joked I had “rubber bones.” I laughed, too.Until I found out I wasn’t the only one.It started one night when I stumbled across a thread on a strange online forum called VeilWatchers. The title read:”Have You Ever Broken a Bone? No? Read This.”The post talked about a pattern.Apparently, there’s a group of people who’ve never broken a bone, and they tend to share strange traits:They heal quicklyThey rarely get sickSome don’t even remember serious injuries from childhoodSome users suggested it’s a genetic mutation. Others believed something darker: a hidden bloodline, a secret government experiment—or something older. Something not from here.And then came the creepiest part.According to the post, several of these “unbroken” people had disappeared. Not just gone missing, but vanished after freak, unexplained accidents—collapsing trails, plane turbulence, cars veering off empty roads. Bodies never found. Official reports vague or redacted.At first, I thought it was just internet paranoia.Until I started dreaming of places I’ve never seen.White walls. Bright lights. Whispers in a language I don’t understand. One morning, I woke up with a long scar down my back. No memory of how it got there.I haven’t told anyone.I still haven’t broken a bone.But lately… I’ve noticed someone watching me. A shadow that disappears when I turn around. A face in the crowd that keeps showing up. Every day, it feels a little closer.Maybe it’s all in my head.Or maybe they know I’m still here.Maybe they’re coming back for me.So let me ask you—Have you ever broken a bone?
I find this very interesting because I have been in multiple car accidents and walked away doctors and paramedics both said many times how lucky I am and people don’t survive accidents like that. Let alone walk away without a scratch. I wonder where this stems from this article only left me more curious of why I have been so lucky all these years.