The girl sat in a chair against the wall, hunched over with her face in her hands, her shoulders shaking with sobs. She was maybe fourteen or fifteen, with dark hair that fell past her shoulders in unruly waves. When she looked up at the sound of my voice, I felt the floor tilt beneath…
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath, my heartbeat echoing in my ears like war drums. Forty-five years raising Emily alone after her father abandoned us, and this is how she repaid me. I heard the key in the door. Emily was home early. Quickly, I put the documents back and hid the…
The phone rang again. It was Beth. “Did you see it?” her voice was broken. “Helen, I didn’t know how to tell you. Sarah called me a week ago, crying. She found the papers in her parents’ room and brought them to me. I couldn’t believe my own niece…” her voice broke. “How could they…
The last document broke my soul. It was a letter from Emily to David, dated three months ago. I already spoke with the lawyer. Once she’s committed, we can sell the house. With the $1,200 from her monthly pension, plus what we get from the sale, we can buy something better on the north side. Sarah…
I gave her my savings so she could study nursing. I sold my mother’s jewelry to pay for her books. When she met David, I invited them to live with me because they had nowhere to go. “Your mom is an angel,” David used to tell me in those first few years, kissing my forehead…
The patient shows clear signs of senile dementia and erratic behavior. Immediate commitment is recommended for her safety and the safety of her family. Lies. It was all lies, written in a cold, calculating script. My memories took me back to that spring afternoon twenty years ago when Emily came home crying because she had lost…
“I see,” she nodded. “They’re all the same. First, they’re your rock, and then it’s a knife in the back.” She paused, tapping the concrete floor with the tip of a thin cane I hadn’t noticed before. “Want to make him regret it today?” I looked at her incredulously. What could this poor, seemingly blind…
I didn’t immediately notice that I wasn’t alone. In the darkest corner, huddled in a ball, sat an elderly woman. She wore an old but well-made coat, and her eyes were hidden by large, dark sunglasses—the kind people with visual impairments wore. Her head was bowed; she seemed to be sleeping. Suddenly, the old woman…
With those words, he floored the gas. The car sped away, kicking up a cloud of dust. I stood frozen, utterly alone. No wallet, no phone. He had taken everything. Despair rose in my throat like an icy wave. I slumped onto the shaky wooden bench under the rusted metal roof of the shelter, tears…
He smiled, a cruel, unfamiliar smile. “There is no person, Naomi. There’s only you and your problem with money. You didn’t want to help, so figure out your problems on your own.” The realization dawned on me slowly, chillingly. “What do you mean?” “I mean, I’m leaving you and your debts and your constant whining….