The Nanny Opened His Cast And Exposed A Stepmother’s Lie-mdue - Chainityai

The Nanny Opened His Cast And Exposed A Stepmother’s Lie-mdue

The first time Ethan Miller begged his father to cut off his arm, Richard thought grief had finally swallowed the little boy whole.

Rain scratched at the upstairs windows of their suburban house, and the sound made the room feel smaller than it was.

The air smelled of sweat, damp plaster, and children’s pain medicine that had stopped doing its job hours earlier.

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Ethan was ten years old, small for his age, with brown hair stuck to his forehead and one arm locked inside a white cast from wrist to upper forearm.

His fingers were swollen and shiny.

His cheeks were wet.

Every breath came out broken, like his body had been crying so long it had forgotten how to rest.

“Dad, please,” he sobbed. “Cut it off. Please. I can’t take it.”

Richard Miller stood beside the bed with his hands open and useless.

He had led board meetings, handled layoffs, negotiated contracts, and made people twice his age back down across conference tables.

But he did not know what to do with his son begging to lose an arm.

Vanessa stood near the doorway in a cream silk robe, her hair smooth, her voice softer than the rain.

“He’s panicking,” she said. “The doctor warned us this could happen.”

Ethan shook his head so hard his pillow slid sideways.

“No. No. Something is inside it.”

Vanessa sighed, not loudly enough to sound cruel, just loudly enough for Richard to hear how tired she was.

“That’s the anxiety talking.”

Four days earlier, Ethan had fallen at school during recess.

The school office called Richard at 2:36 PM.

By 4:18 PM, Dallas Children’s Orthopedic Clinic had discharged him with a printed sheet that said closed fracture, immobilize, follow up in seven days.

Vanessa had been the one to fold the papers.

She had been the one to put the follow-up appointment card in the kitchen drawer.

She had been the one to tell Richard, twice, that the orthopedic assistant said Ethan would try to scratch, pull, and fuss because children hated casts.

Richard believed her because he wanted to believe somebody in the house knew what to do.

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