Bedridden Mother Sold The Mansion Before Her Cruel Family Knew-felicia

The soup came down like punishment, hot enough to steal the breath from my chest before I could decide whether to scream.

Pepper burned my lips, my throat, the thin skin above my ribs, and the nightgown that clung to me as if the cloth itself had turned cruel.

Mara had one hand under my jaw when she poured it.

Image

She wanted my face lifted.

She wanted me to know exactly who was doing it.

“Burn and rot, you crippled hag,” she spat, her voice bright with a hatred she had polished for years. “The cheapest asylum in the state is coming to drag you away at dawn.”

The bowl emptied against me.

Broth ran down my collarbone, pooled in the hollow of my chest, and sank into the blanket.

I smelled pepper, chicken fat, medicine, and old wood warmed by the morning sun.

I heard Mara’s expensive leather shoes slide back from the bed as she looked down in disgust.

A splash had struck one shoe.

She wiped it with the edge of my blanket.

That, more than the pain, nearly made me laugh.

My body had become a prison years ago, but even a prison can have windows.

Mine were my eyes.

I watched her.

I remembered.

Mara stood over me with the empty porcelain bowl shaking in her hand, not from fear, but from the force of what she had finally allowed herself to do.

She was breathing hard.

Her cheeks were flushed.

The silk scarf at her throat had slipped sideways, and for once she did not look perfect.

She looked exactly as she was.

Behind her, Daniel stood in the doorway.

My son.

My only child.

The boy I had carried through fever, debt, grief, and lonely winters.

He wore a silk robe and the stunned expression of a man who had walked in after the worst had happened and hoped the room would forgive him for arriving late.

“Mara,” he said.

That was all.

One name.

Not, Mother, are you hurt?

Not, get away from her.

Not, call a doctor.

Only her name, weak as a thread left too long in sunlight.

Mara turned on him with the bowl still in her fist.

Read More