Her Stepmother Made Her Injured Father Crawl. Then She Opened The File-luna

I came home to the sound of porcelain trembling against marble.

Not breaking.

Not yet.

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Just that tiny, nervous rattle a teacup makes when someone’s hand is shaking too hard to hold it steady.

The front door of my father’s house opened with the same brass key I had carried for six years and never used.

The foyer smelled like lemon polish, spilled black tea, and Vivian’s perfume.

Expensive perfume.

The kind that enters a room before the person wearing it and stays long after everyone wishes it would leave.

My suitcase bumped against the threshold behind me.

For half a second, I thought I had walked into an ordinary kind of silence.

Then I saw my father on the floor.

Richard Hale was crawling across the marble.

His right leg dragged behind him, stiff and useless from the accident.

One hand pressed flat to the floor.

The other trembled around a cup of tea that had already spilled down his bandaged wrist.

Vivian stood above him in red heels.

She looked bored.

That was the first thing I noticed, and somehow it was worse than rage.

Rage would have meant she still saw him as human enough to provoke her.

Boredom meant this had become routine.

“Crawl faster, Richard,” she said, her voice smooth as glass. “Or you get no medicine.”

Her heel came down near his hand.

Not on it.

Near it.

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