I Was Bleeding Out While My Parents Called Me Overdramatic-Teptep

The first thing I remember is the bathroom tile.

Not the pain, although there must have been plenty of it.

Not the fear, although fear was there too, pressing its cold thumb under my ribs.

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It was the tile.

Glossy white, crossed with thin grey veins, cold against my knees as if the whole floor had been waiting for me to fall.

My mother had chosen it from a showroom because, according to her, proper marble made a room look expensive without needing to shout.

She liked things that looked composed.

Rooms.

Tables.

Photographs.

Children.

That night, the marble held the print of my hand in blood.

It was too bright against the white, almost indecent, like something rude written across a page that had been prepared for guests.

The house was quiet around me in that padded way expensive houses can be quiet.

Thick rugs.

Heavy curtains.

Doors that closed with soft, confident clicks.

Walls designed to keep discomfort outside.

Except I was the discomfort inside.

My name is Rachel Sullivan, and I was nineteen years old when my parents left me alone to attend my sister Diana’s graduation gala.

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