Eli hit the ground hard. Too hard.
And then he didn’t move.
For a moment, the entire world went quiet.
The smell of charcoal, grilled meat, and cheap perfume still hung thick in the air. People stood frozen, plastic cups halfway to their lips, laughter gone like it had never existed.
Lisa exhaled, rolling her eyes as if nothing serious had happened.
“I’m tired of that fake hero nonsense. A medal for failure.”
Something inside me didn’t break.
It went still.
The kind of stillness that comes after you’ve already survived worse.
My name is Claire Donovan. To everyone there, I was just Ethan’s sister—the quiet one, the one staying in the guest room, the one people whispered about.
The one they assumed had nothing left.
I had let them believe that.
It made things easier.
I stayed near the grill most of the afternoon, flipping burgers, saying little. Ethan had disappeared inside to watch the game, leaving me to handle his guests. That was the unspoken arrangement—roof over my head in exchange for silence.
Lisa thrived in that silence.
“Charity cases don’t get breaks,” she had said earlier, her voice loud enough for everyone to hear.
I ignored her then.
But now—
I dropped to my knees beside Eli.
His skin was pale.
His breathing shallow. I checked his pulse, steady but faint. Head injury.
He wasn’t conscious.
Around me, no one moved to help.
Lisa stood with her arms crossed, irritated more than anything else. “He was being rude,” she muttered.
I didn’t respond.
There are moments when words become meaningless.
I pulled out my phone and called for an ambulance.
Lisa laughed.
“Go ahead. My dad runs this town.
Who do you think they’ll believe?”
I let her laugh.
When the police arrived, her father stepped into the yard like everything already belonged to him.