The Hospital Call That Forced My Family To Face Its Ruined Son-Teptep

The last time my parents saw my brother, he was bleeding on the concrete outside our back door, looking up at them as if love itself had suddenly become a stranger.

Two years later, I was the one in danger, lying under bright hospital lights while a surgeon explained that only the boy they had banished might save my life.

That was when my family learnt that a lie does not stay buried just because everyone is too ashamed to dig.

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My name is Seraphina Vale, but nobody has called me that unless I was in trouble.

To everyone at home, I was Sera.

I was eight years old on the night everything happened.

Orion was nineteen, old enough to look like an adult to other people, but still young enough to leave his cereal bowl in the sink and forget where he had put his phone charger.

There were thirteen years between us, which meant he was not just my brother in the ordinary sense.

He was the person who tied my shoelaces when Mum was late, cut my toast into triangles, and walked me back from the school gate when Dad was stuck at work.

He was quiet.

Not cold, not odd in the way people said it, just quiet.

He liked wires, circuits, tiny screws, and little machines that whirred across his desk before collapsing in a heap.

His bedroom always smelt of solder, old books, and the cheap biscuits he pretended not to keep in the drawer.

When Mum came home from hospital shifts with her shoulders tight and her shoes squeaking on the kitchen tiles, Orion would already have the kettle on.

He never made a grand show of helping.

He simply did what needed doing.

That is the kind of goodness people miss, because it does not ask to be applauded.

My father, Adrian, loved noise when he was happy and silence when he was angry.

My mother, Celeste, was softer, or at least I thought she was then.

She had the sort of tired kindness people trust before they realise tired people can still choose the wrong side.

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