She Refused Her Sister’s Mortgage. The Papers Hid a Darker Trap-eirian

The first thing I remembered was the smell.

Not my sister’s voice.

Not Ethan’s fist.

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Not even the sound my shoulder made when it came out of place.

The first thing was antiseptic, cold coffee, and the strange papery dryness of hospital sheets against the side of my face.

For a few seconds, I floated under that smell without a name or a body.

Then pain found me.

It started deep in my shoulder, sharp and hot, and ran down my arm so fast I tried to inhale and could not finish the breath.

My ribs answered next.

My jaw followed.

Then my eye throbbed hard enough that I understood, before I opened it fully, that half my face was no longer shaped the way it had been the day before.

“Sweetheart,” my mother whispered.

Her voice sounded scraped raw.

I turned my head a little and saw her sitting beside the hospital bed with a paper cup of vending-machine coffee between both hands.

She had not drunk it.

The cup had gone soft at the rim where she kept squeezing it.

Behind her stood my father, one hand on the back of a plastic chair, his knuckles pale from how hard he was gripping it.

He looked older than he had the last time I saw him.

Not years older.

Consequences older.

Beside the bed, a woman in a navy uniform sat with a small notebook resting across her knee.

She had dark hair pulled back, steady eyes, and a face that did not rush me.

“I’m Officer Delgado,” she said. “You’re safe now.”

Safe was a strange word to offer someone whose own family had turned a garage into a crime scene.

I tried to speak, but my mouth was dry.

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