l treated them like treasure. I held them up against the warm light, watching them shimmer for a second, before placing t
30 PM. I traced the
to myself, though the quiet fe
ite bathrobe. The room was silent, so silent I could hear the distant hum of
new every inch of my room, from the scratch on the mirror frame to the ba
em, soft careful footsteps approaching. Unhurried. Delibera
ime, I t
rew on my robe loosely, fingers tying the knot as the door cr
ame the whisper. S
n the same hushed ton
. empty. Her eyes glinted with something unreadable. She wore her satin nig
asked. The question didn't ne
Momma,"
sound of running water reached my ears from the bathroom. A faint flicking sound followed, scented cand
t move. I
stopped, I drifte
e hand, the other clutching my pink loofah. Rose-scented oil
, always too warm, but I didn't flinch. I never did. I sat
n't rough on purpose. That was the problem, this was care in her mind. This w
she p
hythm. I knew
the ones she usually used to pin her curls back when they drooped. She held
not in fear, but
ain. Opened the clips. And f
curled my toes beneath the water, eyes still on the marb
ame the
yes didn't even blink. I knew what she would
candles, and the
st a
n ano
he soft slope of my stomach. It burned, but n
scream. I d
t in pain," I thought. "Where I scream fo
. I hadn't for
'm not so no
my m
insane. Not
enough to turn a soothing bath
ng me something. Discipl
s teaching me
of the wax drip, each drop a quiet bea
owel, and said, "Your hair isn't braided dea" she said cares
dn't a
wax ha
water
she left, but It wasn't over just