My Sister Forged My Signature Before Her Husband Put Me in the Hospital-eirian

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

Antiseptic, burned coffee, and plastic.

The plastic came from the oxygen tube resting near my cheek, soft and cold against skin that no longer felt like it belonged to me.

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The burned coffee came from the paper cup in my mother’s hands.

The antiseptic came from everywhere else.

It lived in the sheets, the rails, the clean floor, the sharp air, and the white walls that seemed too bright for a room where my family had finally run out of lies.

For a few seconds, I did not understand that I was in a hospital.

I understood only pain.

It was in my shoulder first, deep and hot, as though someone had driven a burning hook beneath the joint and left it there.

Then it found my ribs.

Then my face.

Then my mouth, where the inside of my lip had split and the taste of copper still sat at the back of my throat.

My mother was crying beside the bed.

Not loudly.

Worse than loudly.

She was making small broken sounds into a paper cup of cold coffee, like she thought grief could be hidden if she aimed it downward.

My father stood behind her, both hands gripping the back of a chair.

His face looked stripped.

Not sad. Not angry. Stripped.

And sitting beside my bed with a notebook balanced on her knee was a police officer.

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

Safe.

It was such a strange word to say in front of my parents.

Twenty-four hours earlier, I had gone to their house because my mother said my sister was upset and the family needed to clear the air.

That was the phrase she used.

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