On Christmas Eve, the snow fell in relentless sheets.
The basement was damp and bitterly cold, the air thick with mildew. My grandmother, Elizabeth Roberts, lay curled beneath a stiff cotton quilt, her cheeks flushed an alarming red from the fever burning through her frail body.
"That old hag does nothing but burn through money! If she keeps staying here, we'll all be starving in no time!"
My aunt, Denise Roberts's shrill voice sliced through the thin wall.
I, Selene Roberts, clenched the last hundred-dollar bill I had left. It was meant to buy fever medicine for Elizabeth.
A thunderous bang exploded against the door.
It flew open under a brutal kick, and the temperature inside seemed to drop in an instant.
My uncle, Victor Roberts stood in the doorway, a coarse woven sack hanging from his hand.
He did not even glance at me before striding toward the bed.
My heart lurched. That was the kind of sack used for hauling garbage.
"Uncle Victor, please..."
I gripped his forearms, blocking his path.
"Please, just give us two more days. Grandma still has a fever. If you move her now, she'll die!"
Denise followed him in, pressing a filthy rag over her nose and mouth as if even breathing the same air disgusted her.
"Two more days? Selene, do you even hear yourself? This place is rented by me and your uncle! Your useless parents dumped you and this old burden on us and died. We've put up with you for years. We've done more than enough!"
Her sharp, narrow eyes were filled with venom. Over the years, I had heard those same insults more times than I could count.
"We'll leave first thing tomorrow morning. Please, Denise." I clutched at the hem of her pants, my fingers tightening until they ached.
"Get off me! Don't bring your bad luck onto me!" Denise kicked my hand away.
Victor had clearly run out of patience.
He drove his foot hard into my chest.
The pain knocked the air out of me. I collapsed onto the floor, curled in on myself, unable to make a sound.
In that brief moment, Victor yanked back the stiff quilt and dragged Elizabeth off the bed as if she were nothing more than a carcass, hauling her straight toward the door.
"No-!" My voice tore from my throat as I struggled to my feet and stumbled after him.
By the time I staggered into the alley, Victor was about to throw Elizabeth into a mound of snow.
"If you're going to drop dead, do it somewhere else. Not on my property."
There was a dull thud. Elizabeth let out a faint groan, then went completely still.
Victor and Denise exchanged a glance, brushed the dust from their hands, and walked away without looking back even once.
I crawled forward on my knees and pulled Elizabeth into my arms.
Her body was losing warmth far too quickly.
"Grandma, don't fall asleep... please." My hands trembled as I rubbed hers, trying to pass my own body heat to her, but my fingers were already numb with cold.
On a Christmas Eve meant for family reunions, Elizabeth and I were discarded like two sacks of trash.
I did not cry.
In that moment, tears were the cheapest thing in the world.
A low hum cut through the silence.
At the far end of the alley, two blinding beams tore open the darkness, the glare forcing me to shield my eyes.
Those were not ordinary headlights.
A convoy of black cars glided silently into the mud-soaked slum alley.
They were Rolls-Royce Phantoms, their obsidian bodies gleaming with a cold sheen beneath the falling snow.
Mounted on the front was not an ordinary license plate, but a diplomatic one.