Her Mother Took Her Phone While Her Injured Son Gasped On The Floor-mdue - Chainityai

Her Mother Took Her Phone While Her Injured Son Gasped On The Floor-mdue

My eight-year-old son was curled on my parents’ living room carpet, trying to breathe around pain I could not yet name.

The room smelled like lemon cleaner, old couch cushions, and the chicken casserole my mother had pulled from the oven twenty minutes earlier.

The TV was muted, but the screen kept flashing blue-white light over the walls, over my father’s recliner, over my sister’s crossed arms, over my son’s small body on the floor.

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For one strange second, my mind tried to make the scene normal.

Kids wrestle.

Kids fall.

Kids bump into furniture, scrape knees, cry hard, and then ask for juice ten minutes later.

But Noah was not crying like a child who wanted attention.

He was trying not to cry because crying made breathing worse.

His hands were clamped around his side.

His face had gone pale around the mouth.

Every breath came out short, thin, and frightened.

“Noah,” I said, dropping beside him. “Baby, look at me.”

His eyes found mine, but they did not settle.

They kept flicking toward the hallway where his cousin Ryan stood.

Ryan was twelve, tall for his age, and big enough now that the old excuse of “little boys roughhousing” had started to sound more like a shield than an explanation.

He stood with his shoulders back and his fists still closed.

One knuckle had a red scrape across it.

Nobody in the room seemed interested in that detail.

“What happened?” I asked.

My voice sounded too calm for what my body was doing.

My heart was beating so hard I felt it in my hands.

Noah tried to inhale and made a tiny broken sound.

“Mom,” he whispered, “it hurts.”

My sister Carla leaned against the kitchen counter with her arms crossed.

She wore that familiar little expression, half boredom and half satisfaction, like I had always been the dramatic one and she had been waiting for another chance to prove it.

“He just shoved him,” she said.

“Just shoved him?”

“Kids get rough.”

My mother stood near the sofa, one hand pressed against the back cushion, lips tight.

That look had been in my life since childhood.

It meant the decision had already been made before I entered the room.

It meant there was a version of the truth she preferred, and everyone else was expected to arrange themselves around it.

My father sat in his recliner with his reading glasses low on his nose.

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