Stepmom Chose One Twin For Christmas, Then Grandma Evie Saw The Photo-Tep

The smell hit me before the door even opened.

Not cinnamon.

Not pine.

Image

Not anything that belonged in a house pretending to celebrate Christmas.

It was lemon cleaner, sharp and artificial, the kind Carol sprayed on every surface until the whole place smelled less like a home and more like a showroom waiting for inspection.

I stood on the porch with my six-year-old twin daughters holding my hands.

Ava was on my left.

Bella was on my right.

They wore matching pink coats, matching white hats with pom-poms, and matching boots that tapped softly against the porch boards because they were trying to knock the snow off the way I had taught them.

If you did not know them, you saw two identical little girls.

If you loved them, you never confused them.

Ava went still when she felt unsafe.

Bella tried to fill the silence before it swallowed her.

Ava watched first.

Bella asked first.

Ava squeezed your hand when she needed help.

Bella tilted her chin like she could protect both of them with attitude alone.

They were six years old, and already they could read a room faster than most adults in my family.

That was not something I was proud of.

That was something they had learned from being around Carol.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *