I checked my reflection in the darkened front window. I was thirty-two, a Senior VP of Operations at a logistics firm, wearing a coat that cost more than my brother’s car. Yet, standing on this porch, I felt like I was seven years old again, desperate to show them a drawing I’d made, waiting for…
The taxi idled at the curb behind me, its exhaust sputtering into the gray, drizzly afternoon. I gripped the rims of my wheelchair, the cold metal biting into my calloused palms. I had maneuvered myself up the driveway—the same asphalt slope I used to shovel every winter as a child, back when my knees worked…
I hit accept. “Happy Easter, sweetheart,” I said, my voice full of warmth. The sound that came back was not a cheerful greeting. “Dad… oh my god… please…” Lily’s voice was a shattered, terrified, barely recognizable whisper, broken by a series of ragged, wet sobs. “Lily? Honey, what’s wrong?” I asked, my own voice instantly…
My younger sister. The wild child. The woman who had spent her entire life looking at my toys, my clothes, and my achievements with a hungry, covetous glint in her eyes. We hadn’t spoken in three months, not since she borrowed five hundred dollars for “rent” and posted pictures of a trip to Cabo the…
She leaned in, her breath a nauseating cocktail of expensive gin and peppermint, and whispered against my ear. “The mourning period is over, Elara Vance. Reality starts now.” A few feet away stood Tyler, Patricia’s son and my stepbrother of three torturous years. He didn’t bother wearing a tie. He held his iPhone aloft, the…
I stood by the grill, flipping burgers with a mechanical rhythm. My brother, Mark, was inside watching the game, leaving me to serve his guests. That was the arrangement. They gave me a roof; I gave them servitude and silence. “Hey, freeloaders don’t get a beer break,” a voice shrilled from behind me. I didn’t…
The violent tremor in her voice snapped my spine completely straight. “Sir… I need you to come back here. Right now. Please.” The oxygen in my small apartment suddenly felt remarkably thin. “Rosa,” I said, already dropping the sandpaper and reaching blindly for my car keys on the pegboard. “What exactly happened?” I heard a…
But I did absolutely nothing of the sort. I remained perfectly still at the perimeter of that endless table, marooned amidst a sea of his relatives—people I had foolishly spent three years trying to convince myself were my own flesh and blood. Instead of breaking down, I read. I scanned every single clause, every stipulated…
So, when my father, Gregory Lane, surprisingly invited me onto his motorized skiff that morning, my chest fluttered with a pathetic, desperate spark of hope. “Just one last ride out on the water, kiddo,” he had said, clapping a heavy hand on my shoulder. “Before you go off to university and forget all about us.” He…
“He said if I left, he’d burn the world down with you in it,” Ava sobbed, her voice a fragile, broken rasp. She flinched as the thunder cracked outside, curling her body into a defensive fetal position on my battered leather sofa. She was whispering apologies to the empty air, begging for forgiveness for offenses…