Five Minutes Before Execution, Her Son Pointed At The Real Killer-mdue - Chainityai

Five Minutes Before Execution, Her Son Pointed At The Real Killer-mdue

My mother was sentenced to die for killing my father, and for six years, almost everyone around us believed the state had gotten it right.

I told myself I was different.

I told myself I never truly believed she had done it.

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But there is a difference between loving someone in your heart and standing beside them when a courtroom, a case file, and every whisper in a grocery store tells you to step away.

By the time I understood that, my mother had only five minutes left.

The final visitation room at the state prison was colder than I expected.

It smelled like old coffee, floor cleaner, damp coats, and metal.

Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, making my mother’s skin look pale and making the cuffs around her wrists shine every time she moved her hands.

My little brother Ethan stood beside me in a blue sweater, eight years old, thin as a reed, clutching my sleeve in the same way he used to clutch the hem of our mother’s shirt when he was scared.

He had been two when our father died.

That was what everyone kept saying.

Too young to know.

Too young to remember.

Too young to matter.

But that day, his fingers were locked around my coat like something inside him had been waiting six years to get out.

My mother, Caroline Hayes, looked at us through a kind of tired steadiness I had not earned.

Her hair was pulled back.

Her prison uniform hung loose at her shoulders.

The chains at her wrists touched the edge of the bolted table with a little sound that made my stomach twist.

“Don’t cry for me,” she told me.

Her voice was worn, but it did not shake.

“Just take care of Ethan.”

I nodded because nodding was easier than speaking.

There are moments when guilt becomes physical.

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