After the ER, Her Parents Threw Her Out and Demanded $2,000 Rent-Neyney - Chainityai

After the ER, Her Parents Threw Her Out and Demanded $2,000 Rent-Neyney

The slap split my lip before I even understood my father had moved.

One second, I was standing in the rain with Ava’s ER discharge papers curling in my hand, the ink already spotting blue from the water.

The next, my cheek hit the driveway hard enough to make my teeth click, and all I could taste was blood, cold rain, and dirty concrete.

Image

Ava screamed my name from behind me.

It was not a normal scream.

It was the kind a child makes when the world changes shape in front of her and no adult in reach looks safe anymore.

Our belongings were scattered across my parents’ front lawn like somebody had dumped our lives out for bulk trash day.

Cardboard boxes sagged in the rain.

My work laptop sat half-open in the wet grass.

Ava’s stuffed bunny was facedown near the mailbox, one ear pressed into a puddle.

Her inhaler had rolled beneath a plastic storage bin, and the pink blanket she had clutched through three hours in the ER was soaked through at the curb.

My mother stood on the porch in her silk robe, arms crossed, with the small American flag beside the front door whipping in the rain like it wanted no part of us.

“Pay rent or get out!” she screamed.

I pushed myself up on one elbow.

“Rent?”

“Two thousand dollars,” she said. “Tonight.”

She pointed down at me as if I were an overdue bill.

“You and that child have lived here for free long enough.”

For a moment, I could not even process the words.

Three hours earlier, I had been sitting beside Ava in an ER bay while a nurse checked her oxygen level and handed me discharge instructions.

Ava was seven, small for her age, stubborn when she was scared, and brave in the way children are when they do not yet understand adults are supposed to protect them.

She had cried only once in the hospital, when the nurse removed the monitor from her finger.

Then she had asked whether Grandma would make soup when we got home.

That question stayed in my chest like a bruise.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *