The Day My Sister Shaved My Daughter’s Head, Our Family Split Open-felicia

The phone on the conference table started vibrating just as I clicked to the slide with the revenue projections.

At first, I ignored it.

I had fifteen board members in front of me, a presentation I had spent a month building, and exactly one chance to convince them that my division deserved the expansion budget I was asking for.

The conference room on the twenty-first floor was all glass, chrome, and expensive silence.

A tray of pastries sat untouched near the coffee service.

My laptop fan hummed softly beside my elbow.

I was midway through a sentence about Q3 performance when the phone buzzed again, harder this time, skittering a fraction of an inch over the polished walnut table.

Image

I glanced down only to silence it.

WESTFIELD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.

My mouth went dry.

I apologized to the room, stepped back from the screen, and answered.

Principal Karen Douglas spoke in a voice so carefully controlled that I knew immediately something was wrong.

“Mrs. Brennan, I need you to come to the school right away.

Emma is safe right now, but there’s been an incident.”

There are words that are technically reassuring and still manage to terrify you.

Safe right now was one of them.

I don’t remember what I said to the board after that.

I remember gathering my things with clumsy hands.

I remember one of the directors trying to tell me to take my time, as if time had not just become the most violent thing in the world.

I remember the elevator feeling like it was descending through syrup.

I remember running across the parking garage in heels that suddenly felt absurd.

By the time I reached Westfield Elementary in Westfield, New Jersey, my pulse was drumming in my ears.

The secretary didn’t say a word.

She just pointed toward the nurse’s office.

Before I got there, I heard Emma.

Read More