Bleeding At 2AM, I Heard Mum Reveal The Truth About Dad-Teptep

At 2:00 a.m., the house did not feel grand any more.

It felt hollow.

Rain pressed itself against the windows in thin silver lines, and the marble floor beneath my cheek was so cold it seemed to be taking the warmth out of me piece by piece.

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My name is Marie Wolf.

I was twenty-two years old, a private first class in the United States Army, and I had been trained to notice injuries without panicking.

A clean airway.

Bleeding.

Shock.

Fractures.

I knew the words, knew the order, knew the calm voice you were supposed to use when somebody else was hurt.

It turned out none of that helped when the broken body was yours.

My right leg lay at an angle that made my stomach twist if I looked at it too long.

Blood had dried at one side of my scalp and kept sliding warm behind my ear from the other.

Every breath dragged pain through my ribs and spine.

Above me, the chandelier glittered with a frozen brightness, all cut glass and perfect symmetry, as if nothing ugly could possibly happen beneath it.

The room still carried the remains of the evening.

Melted ice in a tumbler on the drinks trolley.

A lipstick print on a champagne flute near the piano.

A folded programme from the donor dinner lying on the rug.

The faint scorch of a fire that had burned low.

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