I was twelve when everything in my life changed, though the truth was it had been breaking for years. My stepfather, Mark, treated hurting me like some twisted sport. If he came home angry, I would get slapped. If he came home drunk, the belt came out. And if he came home bored, he used his fists “just to keep me tough,” as he liked to say. My mother, Lauren, rarely intervened. She stayed quiet, shrinking into the background, pretending she didn’t hear anything.
But the worst day happened on a Sunday afternoon. I was washing dishes when Mark walked into the kitchen, looking irritated for no reason. “You missed a spot,” he muttered, grabbing the plate from my hand. It slipped and cracked on the floor. Before I could apologize, his hand shot forward, gripping my arm with a force that felt like fire. He twisted. I heard a sickening snap before the pain even hit.
I screamed and fell to the ground, clutching my arm that now hung unnaturally. Mark froze—only for a moment—before swearing under his breath. “We need to take her to the hospital,” he said, annoyed as if I had inconvenienced him.
At the hospital, my mother squeezed my good hand and whispered, “Remember—you fell off your bike. Do you understand?” Her eyes were terrified, but not for me. They feared losing him, not losing me.
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