When The Neurologist Questioned Her Fall, Her Stepsister Went Pale-mdue - Chainityai

When The Neurologist Questioned Her Fall, Her Stepsister Went Pale-mdue

The emergency room at midnight had a sound I never forgot, a low fluorescent buzz that made the whole ceiling feel irritated, as if even the lights knew something was wrong and nobody in my family was brave enough to say it.

The air smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and the copper tang of blood drying near my temple, and the paper sheet under my legs cracked every time I shifted on the hospital bed.

I was sixteen years old, wearing a thin gown over a shoulder that burned every time I breathed, trying to keep my eyes on the doctor’s hand while the room kept sliding half an inch to the left.

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Dr. Mitchell held up two fingers and moved them slowly in front of my face.

“Follow this for me, Olivia,” he said.

I tried.

My vision slipped sideways before his hand reached the middle.

He did not look surprised, but he did look concerned in the quiet way adults look when they already know the story they have been handed does not fit the body in front of them.

“Can you tell me what happened?” he asked.

My mouth opened.

My father answered first.

“She fell down the basement stairs,” he said, almost too quickly. “She was getting decorations for Vanessa’s graduation party.”

That was the first time I understood a lie could have weight.

It did not float in the room.

It landed.

Lisa, my stepmother, stood beside him in a cream blazer that somehow still looked pressed after midnight, one manicured hand resting on his arm like she was steadying him and warning him at the same time.

“She’s always been clumsy,” Lisa added, her voice soft enough to sound kind to anyone who did not know her. “It was dark down there. She probably missed a step.”

Vanessa stood on Lisa’s other side with wide, glossy eyes and perfect waves falling over her shoulders.

Her hands were folded in front of her like she was posing for a picture called Worried Sister.

But I saw the corner of her mouth lift.

It was tiny.

It was fast.

It was enough.

Three hours earlier, I had gone into the basement because I heard plastic dragging across concrete.

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