I thought I was safe enough walking home with my daughter at night, but when a stranger grabbed my wrist, everything I believed about my safety — and my past — started unraveling.
I’m in my early 30s, and feel like I’ve been treading water for years.
I work two jobs: one full-time gig at a corporate desk where I answer emails for eight hours, and another bartending shift that keeps the lights on.
Sleep is a luxury.
My body aches in ways I don’t admit. And every morning, I whisper to myself, “Just make it to Friday.
You can breathe then.”
My daughter, Lily, is three.
She’s a sweet girl who hugs her stuffed bunny as if it’s her heartbeat.
She’s the kid who says “thank you” without being told and hums little songs while drawing with crayons.
My Lily is pure and deserves more than a mom who’s constantly running on fumes.
I rely on my neighbor, Marisol, more than I care to admit.
She’s in her late 50s, kind-faced, with a practical kind of warmth that’s reassuring. She watches Lily when I can’t, which is often.
I’m always apologizing when I drop her off, promising to be back by 8:00 p.m., but 9:30 or 10:00 p.m. rolls around before I slip into my apartment like a ghost.
We live in one of those neighborhoods where gentrification didn’t finish its sentence.
There’s a fancy smoothie place at one end of the street and a pawnshop with boarded windows at the other.
You learn how to survive here: keys between fingers, no eye contact after dark.
You learn to walk as if you’re late, even though you’re just trying to make it home.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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