Her Stepsister Called It A Push. The Scan Told A Different Story-paupau

The emergency room lights buzzed over me like they were tired of being awake.

They were too white, too loud, too sharp, and every time I blinked, the room seemed to arrive half a second late.

The air smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and blood drying somewhere near my hairline.

Image

I was sixteen years old, sitting on the edge of a hospital bed in a gown that scratched my shoulders, with my skull throbbing so hard I could feel it in my teeth.

Dr. Mitchell moved two fingers in front of my face and told me to follow them.

I tried.

My vision slid to the left.

“Can you tell me what happened, Olivia?” he asked.

My mouth opened, but my father spoke first.

“She fell down the basement stairs,” he said, too fast.

He said it the way people say things they have practiced in a car before walking into a room.

“She was getting decorations for Vanessa’s graduation party.”

The lie hit me harder than the stairs had.

Lisa, my stepmother, stood beside him in a cream blazer that somehow still looked neat after midnight.

Her hand rested on his arm, not like comfort, but like a reminder.

“Olivia has always been clumsy,” she said softly.

“Basements are dark. She probably missed a step.”

Vanessa stood next to her with her hands folded at her waist and her face arranged into concern.

She looked like the girl every teacher trusted, every parent praised, every neighbor called sweet.

Her hair fell in smooth waves around her shoulders, and her eyes looked wet enough to fool someone who did not know her.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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