When I Refused Her Mortgage, My Brother-In-Law Crossed A Line-nga9999 - Chainityai

When I Refused Her Mortgage, My Brother-In-Law Crossed A Line-nga9999

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

Antiseptic had a way of filling every corner of the hospital room, sharp and clean enough to make my stomach turn.

Under it was burnt coffee from the nurses’ station and the plastic scent of the oxygen tube taped near my cheek.

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I opened one eye and immediately wished I had not.

The light above me was too white, too steady, too unforgiving.

My right shoulder felt like someone had driven a hot wire through it and left it there to spark every time I breathed.

When I tried to move, pain ran from my collarbone to my fingers so fast the room dipped sideways.

“Don’t,” my mother whispered.

Her voice came from somewhere close, but it sounded far away, as if I were hearing her from the bottom of a swimming pool.

I turned my head just enough to see her sitting by the bed with both hands wrapped around a paper coffee cup.

The lid clicked against the rim because her hands were shaking.

Behind her, my father stood with his work jacket still on.

Sawdust clung to the sleeves, and there was a streak of grease near the pocket from the garage where everything had happened.

He had always looked solid to me, the kind of man who could lift a refrigerator with one neighbor and fix a porch step before breakfast.

That morning, he looked hollowed out.

Beside my bed sat a police officer in a dark uniform, a small notebook resting on her lap.

“I’m Officer Ramirez,” she said softly. “You’re safe now.”

I almost laughed.

My ribs would not let me.

Safe was a strange word for a hospital bed, a sling, swollen skin around my eye, and my mother crying into vending-machine coffee.

Safe was stranger because less than twenty-four hours earlier, the people who said they loved me had asked me to sign away my future at a folding table in my parents’ garage.

It had started two weeks before with a phone call from my sister, Jillian.

She sounded cheerful, which was always the first warning.

Jillian had a way of turning breezy when she wanted something serious.

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