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At 3 a.m., my mother called me—her voice shaking as she whispered: “Help… me.” I drove 300 miles through a blizzard and found her outside the hospital gates in the frozen dark—barefoot, bruised, and left there by her stepfather and her own son. So I made certain they felt ten times the pain they caused.
At 3 a.m., my phone shrieked through the darkness, and my mother’s voice reached me as if it had dragged itself up from a grave.
Then the call cut off.
For three seconds, my lungs refused to work. Snow battered the windows of my Chicago apartment, pale fists striking black glass. My mother, Evelyn, never called past midnight. She never begged anyone for help. Not after two divorces, cancer, bankruptcy, and two decades of wearing pain behind a smile like it was a sacred duty.
No answer.
I tried again.
By 3:07, I was behind the wheel, coat thrown over my pajamas, boots untied, heart pounding against my ribs. The hospital was 300 miles away in Ashbury, the town I had escaped ten years earlier while everyone laughed at my back.
“You’ll come crawling back,” he’d told me when I was nineteen, leaving with one suitcase and a scholarship check. “Girls like you don’t survive in the real world.”
Now the highway disappeared under a wall of snow. Trucks were jackknifed along the road like dead beasts. My wipers scraped against ice. My hands locked painfully around the steering wheel.
At 8:46 a.m., I pulled up to Saint Agnes Hospital.
My mother was standing outside the locked emergency entrance in a thin hospital gown, barefoot in the snow, her lips blue, her gray hair frozen against her cheeks. Dark bruises spread across her throat and arms. She looked smaller than any memory I had of her.
I ran so fast I nearly fell.
Her eyes searched until they landed on me. “Mara?”
“Who did this?”
Her lips shook. “Warren said I was wasting money. Caleb said the house wasn’t mine anymore.”
“The house?”
She swallowed hard. “They made me sign papers.”
I lifted my eyes toward the hospital security camera above the gate. Its red light blinked without stopping.
Good.
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