The Mortgage Papers In The Garage Exposed My Sister’s Cruelest Lie-chloe

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

Antiseptic.

Burnt coffee.

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The sharp plastic bite of the oxygen tube brushing my cheek every time I tried to breathe.

Then I heard my mother crying somewhere near the vending machines.

It was not loud, but it was broken in a way that made the room feel smaller.

Her breath kept catching, and the lid on her paper coffee cup clicked against the rim every time her hand shook.

Above me, the ceiling was painfully white.

The fluorescent lights hummed like trapped insects.

For a few seconds, I did not know where I was, or why my body felt like it had been borrowed from someone who had been thrown down a flight of stairs.

Then the pain found me.

It came through my shoulder first, hot and electric.

Then my ribs tightened.

Then my face began to throb so badly that my right eye barely opened.

I tried to lift my arm and nearly blacked out.

“Sweetheart,” my mother whispered.

She was beside the bed before I could answer.

Her hair was pulled back crooked, like she had done it with shaking hands, and her cardigan was buttoned wrong.

“Thank God,” she said. “Thank God you’re awake.”

My father stood behind her with both hands gripping a plastic hospital chair.

Sawdust still clung to his work jacket from the garage.

He looked like a man who had walked into one evening and come out ten years older.

Beside my bed sat Officer Ramirez.

She had a notebook on her lap, a body camera clipped to her uniform, and the calm expression of someone who knew better than to rush a person who had just opened her eyes in a hospital bed.

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