When The Doctor Saw My Bruises, My Mother’s Lie Fell Apart-heuh

My stepfather hurt me every day like it was his favourite pastime, and my mother had learnt to look away with frightening ease.

By the time he broke my arm, she did not even need to think of a lie.

“She slipped in the bathroom,” she said at the hospital, smoothing her coat as if she were explaining a late bus or a spilt cup of tea.

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“She fell by accident.”

The words were neat, clean, and ready.

My arm was not.

I remember the kitchen first.

Not the pain, not even Thomas Vance’s face, but the small ordinary details that made it worse.

The kettle clicking off.

Rain smearing the window.

A tea towel twisted over the handle of the oven.

A plate left in the washing-up bowl, one corner still greasy from dinner.

It should have been an ordinary evening in an ordinary house, the sort of house where coats crowded the hallway and shoes were never quite lined up properly.

Instead, it was the place where I had learnt to move without making noise.

Thomas liked quiet before he hurt me.

He liked the little pause after dinner when my mother took her mug into the sitting room or stayed at the kitchen table with her phone, and I stood there collecting plates like a person trying not to exist.

He would watch me as if waiting for a reason.

Sometimes I gave him none.

It never mattered.

I was seventeen then, old enough to know the rules of the house were wrong, but young enough for adults to call me dramatic, confused, or difficult if I tried to explain them.

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