She Came Home To Help A Veteran. Her Brother Was Waiting With A Knife-ruby - Chainityai

She Came Home To Help A Veteran. Her Brother Was Waiting With A Knife-ruby

The first thing I remember is the ceiling stain.

Not the knife.

Not the shouting.

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Not even the sharp copper smell that cut through lemon dish soap and the roast my mother had left cooling on the counter.

Just that brown water stain above the kitchen light, shaped like a crooked map of Texas.

I had stared at that same stain when I was ten years old, hiding under the table because Cody had punched a hole through my bedroom door and Warren had called it boys being boys.

My name is Vivian Marsh.

I was thirty-one years old when my half-brother stabbed me eight times in my mother’s kitchen.

At the time, I was a special agent with the FBI’s violent crimes unit out of Kansas City.

I had a badge, a gun, a clearance level that changed the temperature of a room, and a framed commendation hanging in my apartment hallway.

I knew how to read a man’s shoulders before he spoke.

I knew how to watch hands.

I knew how to enter a house and clock the exits before removing my coat.

None of that mattered on the floor of the house where I grew up.

Family has a way of reaching past every version of you that survived, finding the scared one, and dragging her back into the room.

My mother called me on a cold Monday in October.

It was 10:40 p.m., and I was eating takeout noodles over my kitchen sink, still wearing my work blouse, when her name lit up my phone.

“Viv?”

Her voice sounded smaller than usual.

Thin.

Like she was speaking through a closed door.

“Mom? What happened?”

“It’s Warren.”

Warren was my stepfather, though I had never called him Dad.

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