Her Deaf Uncle Saw the Bruises, Then One Old Lighter Broke a Billionaire-ruby - Chainityai

Her Deaf Uncle Saw the Bruises, Then One Old Lighter Broke a Billionaire-ruby

The first thing I remember after Lily was born was not her cry.

It was the smell of hospital soap on my hands and the stale coffee Derek left cooling by the window.

The room was too bright, too white, too quiet for what had happened there.

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My newborn daughter was curled against my chest in a striped blanket, her mouth opening and closing in tiny sleepy motions, and I kept looking at her because looking anywhere else meant looking at the marks on my own skin.

They were on my throat.

Four dark fingers on one side, one thumb bruise on the other.

Derek had told the nurse I startled easily after labor.

He said it with such smooth concern that she had almost believed him.

Almost.

Her name tag said Melissa, and when she helped me sit up at 7:18 a.m., her eyes flicked to my neck and stayed there one second too long.

I did not beg her.

I did not cry.

I asked her for the little pink rabbit from my overnight bag.

The rabbit had been a shower gift from a woman at my old office, soft, ridiculous, and pink enough to make Derek roll his eyes when he saw it.

He never knew there was a camera pin hidden under the bow.

I had bought it three weeks earlier after Derek broke a drinking glass beside my head and told me that pregnant women were always inventing stories for attention.

At 8:11 a.m., while Derek stepped into the hallway to take a call from his father, Nurse Melissa helped me angle that rabbit toward the visitor chair.

She did not ask me questions.

She only said, very softly, “Do you want security?”

I said, “Not yet.”

That is the strange thing about living with someone like Derek.

People think the hardest part is fear.

It is not.

The hardest part is timing.

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