My parents always branded me as a “stupid child” because I was left-handed

The knuckles of my left hand always ache when the barometric pressure drops, a dull, thrumming reminder of a childhood spent in a state of siege. I sat in my office at St. Jude’s Memorial, the city lights shimmering through the floor-to-ceiling windows, and massaged the joint of my ring finger.

To the world, I am Dr. Maya Sterling, the Chief of Thoracic Surgery. I am the woman with the “miracle hands.” Patients travel across continents to have my left hand—steady as a mountain, precise as a laser—navigate the delicate topography of their hearts.

But to Silas and Elena Vance, I was never a doctor. I was a defect.

The memory hit me, unbidden and sharp: I was six years old, sitting at the mahogany dining table. I had reached for my glass of milk with my left hand.

Whack.

The heavy wooden ruler struck my knuckles with the precision of a guillotine.

“Right is right, Maya,” my mother’s voice had hissed. She was elegant, even then, her pearls shimmering in the candlelight. “Left is the sinister hand. It is the hand of the clumsy, the hand of the broken. We will not have a broken daughter.”

They had spent years trying to “fix” me. They tied my left arm to the back of my chair until the shoulder joint screamed. They forced me to write with my right hand until my script was a jagged, illegible mess of frustration. When I resisted, when my nature proved more stubborn than their cruelty, they decided I wasn’t worth the effort of repair.

On my tenth birthday, they didn’t give me a cake. They gave me a suitcase.

“We’ve realized we cannot foster a spirit so fundamentally flawed,” Silas had said, standing on the steps of the Sisters of Mercy Orphanage. He didn’t look at me. He looked at his gold watch. “Perhaps the church can pray the ‘left’ out of you. We are starting over. We deserve a masterpiece.”

VA

Related Posts

PART 2: «The Bracelet Was Not Jewelry. It Was a Warning.»

The little girl stayed on her knees, still holding the mop, too frightened to understand why the whole room had changed. At the top of the staircase, the grandmother stood…

Read more

🎬 PART 2: “The Name He Heard Should Have Been Impossible” – Full Story

He almost kept walking. That was the strange part. The man in the blue suit moved down the park path like someone carrying too much in his head, too much…

Read more

She Fed a Homeless Girl for Free — Then the Girl Came Back 20 Years Later

The girl was so small that the morning crowd just stepped around her. She stood at the edge of the hotdog cart with one hand gripping the metal rail, like…

Read more

Rose

The biker’s name was Dean. And ten years ago, Rose had been everything to him. She was the only person who could calm him, soften him, make him believe a…

Read more

Part 2: Rose read the line again and again until the paper blurred in her hands.

What baby? Her son and his wife had told everyone for three years that they couldn’t have children. That grief had changed him. Hardened him. Pulled him away from everyone…

Read more

She Tried to Poison Her Billionaire Husband — One Homeless Boy Saw Everything

The first thing Benjamin Hale noticed about the café was the quiet. Not peace — quiet. The kind that comes with money. Crystal glasses that never clinked too loud. Waiters…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *