My Husband Said Our Sick Teen Was Faking Until The Scan Changed Everything-congtien

My daughter Maya had been sick long before anybody in our house was willing to treat it like an emergency.

I could see it in the way she moved through the kitchen in the mornings, one hand braced against the counter while the toaster clicked and the coffee maker hissed.

I could see it in the way she stopped reaching for the soccer bag by the laundry room door.

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I could see it in the silence that settled over her after school, when she used to come home with grass on her knees, a camera around her neck, and three stories she could not wait to tell me.

She was fifteen, which meant the world expected her to be dramatic.

That was the word Robert used.

Dramatic.

He said it when she pushed her dinner away.

He said it when she went upstairs before eight.

He said it when she missed soccer practice for the third time in two weeks and slept through the afternoon with her curtains half closed.

“She’s pretending,” he told me one evening, leaning back in his chair like the case had already been decided. “Teenagers dramatize everything. We’re not wasting money on unnecessary doctor visits.”

Maya was sitting right there.

She had barely eaten two bites of the chicken I had warmed twice because she kept saying the smell made her nauseous.

Her hair was pulled into a loose ponytail, and her sweatshirt swallowed her shoulders.

She looked smaller than she had looked at Christmas.

“I’m not faking,” she said.

It came out so quietly that I almost did not hear it.

Robert heard it.

He just did not soften.

“Then stop acting like you’re dying.”

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