She hit her head and started sinking, gasping for breath while they stood there laughing. I screamed for help—no one moved. When the ambulance finally arrived, I called my brother and said: “Do what you have to do.”
My son-in-law’s family thought it’d be funny to push my daughter into the icy lake.
She hit her head and started sinking, gasping for breath while they stood there laughing. I screamed for help—no one moved. When the ambulance finally arrived, I called my brother and said: “Do what you have to do.”
The air that day at the Vandor’s Lakehouse on Lake Tahoe smelled of pine needles and fear.
To everyone else, it probably just smelled of pine and the smoke from the grill that had long since cooled, but I always caught that second, bitter undertone. I sat on a wicker chair on the porch, a little separate from the big table, and watched my daughter, Milina. She moved around, pouring aged scotch for her husband, Preston, and his father, Garrett, and laughing at their clumsy jokes.
Her laughter sounded too bright, too strained, like that of a child terrified of punishment, trying desperately to prove she was good. My heart tightened with that laughter. Even after all these years, she was still trying to win their affection—the affection of people incapable of loving anyone but themselves.
Their country estate matched their status: a huge, soulless house of dark wood with massive picture windows that stared out at Lake Tahoe like cold, vacant eyes. The lawn was flawless. Not a single dandelion was allowed to grow.
Everything was too perfect, too calculated, devoid of any warmth. Even the sun seemed different here. Its rays didn’t warm; they just highlighted the glassy sheen of the water and the cold gleam of the expensive cars by the gate.
I only came here for Lena. Every time, she would talk me into it. “Mom, please come.
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