Stepson’s Cruel Game Ended When The Doctor Saw The Marks-Teptep

My stepfather beat me every day as a form of entertainment.

One day, he knocked me unconscious, and when he took me to the hospital, my mother said, “It was because she accidentally slipped while bathing.”

As soon as the doctor looked at me, he picked up the phone and called 911.

Image

The last sound I heard in that kitchen was Martin Graves laughing.

It was not the laugh of a man who had lost control.

That would have been easier to understand.

It was the laugh of a man enjoying himself.

He laughed as if my pain had become part of the furniture, the same as the worn sofa, the chipped mugs, the kettle that clicked off every evening, and the narrow hallway where everyone learnt to move quietly around him.

In public, Martin Graves could pass for ordinary.

He held doors open.

He said thank you to cashiers.

He asked neighbours how they were when they passed our front step under grey drizzle.

Inside our home, he became something else entirely.

He was my stepfather, but that word always felt too soft for what he was.

In our house, he was “sir”.

My mother said it first.

She said it in the careful voice people use when they are trying not to wake a sleeping dog.

Then I learnt to say it too.

I learnt quickly.

I learnt because every wrong answer had a consequence.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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