The emergency room was too bright, too cold, and smelled like antiseptic mixed with the faint copper scent of blood. The kind of smell that clings to your clothes long after you leave. I sat on the edge of the exam table, one hand holding an ice pack against the left side of my face, the other gripping the table just to keep steady.
Every heartbeat pulsed behind my bruised cheekbone.
My jaw throbbed so badly I could barely open my mouth, and the swelling under my eye was already turning the color of a storm cloud. The nurse kept giving me sympathetic looks as she took my vitals. “Honey, are you sure you don’t want to tell us what really happened?” she asked quietly.
“These don’t look like injuries from a fall.”
I didn’t answer. I couldn’t. Through the glass partition, I could see my parents in the waiting area—my mother pacing, her hands flailing as she whispered furiously to my father.
He stood still, arms folded, jaw set in that same expression of authority he’d used my whole life. They looked less like worried parents and more like two people coordinating a story.The nurse sighed, wrote something on her tablet, and said softly, “Well, if you change your mind, you can always file a report later.”
My phone buzzed against my leg. I pulled it out carefully, wincing as the motion tugged on my shoulder.
It was a message from Lawrence Peton—my grandmother’s attorney.
Received your emergency text. I’m on my way. Do not sign anything.
Do not speak to anyone without me present.
My throat tightened. I’d managed to send that text from the bathroom floor, just before my father kicked the door open.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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