A Mother's One Phone Call Turned A Mansion Into A Crime Scene-mdue - Chainityai

A Mother’s One Phone Call Turned A Mansion Into A Crime Scene-mdue

Rain has a way of making every light look guilty.

That was the first thing I noticed when I pulled up to the bus stop and saw the police cruisers washing the empty road in red and blue.

The second thing I noticed was the shape on the concrete.

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My daughter Chloe was curled in the mud with both arms wrapped around her pregnant stomach, wearing only a soaked silk nightgown that belonged in a bedroom, not on a freezing sidewalk before dawn.

For one second, my mind refused to understand what my eyes were seeing.

Then she moved.

I ran so hard I slipped before I reached her, my knees hitting the mud beside her ribs.

Her face was swollen purple and black, her lips split, her hair pasted against her cheeks by rain, and her fingers were locked over the small round curve of the baby she had already started calling our little fighter.

Chloe was twenty-four years old.

She had married Liam Sterling three years earlier, and the Sterling family had made sure she never forgot she had married up.

Eleanor Sterling corrected the way she held forks.

Liam mocked the small house I raised her in.

Their friends smiled at Chloe as if she were a charity project Liam had foolishly brought home and then politely regretted.

But Chloe loved him.

That was the terrible part.

Love can make a good woman explain away the first insult, forgive the first shove, and hide the first bruise beneath a sleeve because she still believes the man who hurt her is buried somewhere under the man who apologized.

I touched her hair and said her name.

Her one good eye opened.

She grabbed my wrist with a strength that did not match the broken little sounds coming from her throat.

She said the silver.

Then she said she had not polished it right.

Then she said Eleanor held her down by her hair, and Liam used the golf club, and when Chloe begged them to stop because it was hurting the baby, they said the baby was a mistake.

The world did not explode around me.

It narrowed.

It narrowed to Chloe’s hand on mine, to the blood at the corner of her mouth, to the cold rain striking the concrete beside her cheek.

By the time the paramedics lifted her, something inside me had become very quiet.

At St. Jude’s Hospital, Dr. Mitchell came out of surgery with the face doctors wear when they already know the family is about to hate every word they say.

He told me Chloe was in a deep coma.

He told me the trauma to her skull was severe.

He told me her spleen had ruptured.

He told me her Glasgow Coma Scale was three, the lowest possible score.

Then he looked at the floor and said I should prepare to say goodbye.

There are sentences that do not enter your ears.

They enter your bones.

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