She Shoved Her Paralyzed Sister at Her Engagement Party. Then the Video Played-eirian

My sister’s hand did not look violent at first.

That was the part people kept pretending afterward.

They wanted the shove to look like something obvious, something theatrical enough to make every guest in the garden hall leap from their chairs and do the right thing.

Image

It was not theatrical.

It was quick.

It was casual.

It was the kind of movement that could be dressed up later as a mistake by anyone desperate enough to protect the person who made it.

But my body knew.

My wheelchair rocked sideways, the left wheel caught the seam in the polished hardwood, and for one foolish second I reached for balance like I still had the old kind of body that could save itself.

My fingers missed the rim.

Then gravity took over.

The engagement party blurred into streaks of ivory silk, pastel dresses, fairy lights, and champagne flutes arranged in a tower that cost more than most people’s rent.

My shoulder struck first.

Pain snapped through me so brightly that the music seemed to disappear.

Then my hip hit the floor, and the $10K champagne tower came down beside me in a glittering crash.

Glass scattered across the hardwood.

Champagne spread under my sleeve.

Somewhere near the dessert table, a fork fell and made a small silver sound that somehow felt more humiliating than the shattering crystal.

I lay with my cheek against the cold wood, smelling wax, lilies, and spilled champagne.

My legs were twisted beneath me.

I could not move them.

I had not moved them in three years.

Cassandra leaned over me in her ivory silk dress, her face flushed from champagne and attention, and said loud enough for everyone to hear, “Stop faking for attention.”

That was when the room changed.

Not because everyone suddenly understood the truth.

Read More