Five minutes before her execution, my little brother pointed at the man who had been standing beside us pretending to grieve.-iwachan

The room went quiet in a way I had never heard before.

Not silent.

Quiet.

Image

The kind of quiet where everyone is still breathing, but nobody wants to be the first person to move.

Ethan’s finger stayed pointed at our uncle.

Victor Hayes stood near the door in his black suit, one hand half-raised like he had been reaching for the handle.

For six years, that man had been our last piece of family.

He bought groceries when the fridge was empty.

He signed school forms when I was too young to understand them.

He sat beside me in court and squeezed my shoulder every time the prosecutor said my mother’s name like it was already a confession.

Now his face looked emptied out.

The warden stepped between Victor and the door.

“Sir,” he said, “stay where you are.”

Victor blinked once.

Then he forced a laugh so thin it barely sounded human.

“This child is scared,” he said. “He doesn’t know what he’s saying.”

Ethan flinched at the sound of his voice.

That was what broke something open in me.

Not the accusation.

Not even the pointing.

It was the way my little brother shrank when Victor spoke.

Like his body remembered something his mouth had been too young to explain.

Mom stared at Ethan as if touching him might make him vanish.

“What did you see, baby?” she whispered.

Read More