Her Sister Attacked Her at Thanksgiving. Then Her Parents Chose Sides – olive

The first thing Lorna remembered was the sound.

It was not the dramatic crack people expect from violence.

It was wetter than that.

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Lower.

A sound that seemed to happen inside her before the kitchen understood it had happened at all.

The chair struck her right side with enough force to bend the world sideways.

A hot line of pain tore through her ribs, then spread through her chest until every breath became a negotiation her body was losing.

She fell hard onto the tile.

Her hand went automatically to her side.

Her mouth opened.

Nothing came out except a thin, broken wheeze.

Above her, the chandelier burned too bright.

The kitchen smelled of Merlot, turkey grease, sweet potatoes, and the sharp metallic edge of fear.

Harper still held the chair.

That was the image Lorna would remember later in the hospital, and then again in the police interview, and then again during every sleepless night after.

Her younger sister standing beside the Thanksgiving table with both hands wrapped around the back of the chair, eyes wide, chest heaving, as if shock could pass for innocence if everyone agreed quickly enough.

For a second, the whole room froze.

Forks hovered above plates.

The gravy spoon slid from the edge of the serving dish and tapped once against the table.

A wineglass stem rolled in a slow half-circle near the wall where Harper’s first thrown glass had shattered.

Marcus’s chair scraped backward.

Lorna heard her mother’s heels click across the tile.

Then she saw the direction her mother ran.

Not toward her.

Toward Harper.

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