Fortune never had the luxury of childhood. Taken from her mother and placed into a system that promised protection but delivered something else, she learned early that survival demanded silence. What happened behind those doors did not disappear. It followed her. Into every choice. Every instinct. By fifteen, she was alone. No home. No guidance. No safety net. She did not grow up. She adapted. The streets did not rescue her. They hardened her. Taught her how to move. How to endure. How to keep breathing when the world kept pressing. As a woman, every decision she makes is shaped by what she survived and what she refuses to become. Then comes Quasim. Controlled. Magnetic. Dangerous in ways that feel far too familiar. He is everything she should run from, yet everything her past has conditioned her to accept. Survival has a cost. Patterns have a memory. Some cycles do not end. They evolve. Mis(s)fortune is not the story of a girl who lost her way. It is the story of a girl who was failed, a woman who learned to live with the aftermath, and the thin line between resilience and ruin.