/0/98962/coverbig.jpg?v=e94e01d0b357cbbdb7fce96915f419f9)
enerous. It was little more than a worn blank
. I didn't dare stretch out; the slanted wall was too close, a
that reminded me of Harry Potter, though there was no magic h
y mother, Alice, had decided there was work in T
n warmed by sunlight and my grandmother's love. I could almost feel the humid ai
had vanished before I could form a memory of him, and my m
ally place me in Alice's custod
Alice and I were strangers bound
shut, forcing my
row. Get through until you're
was a famil
h the silence of the small house. "Sy
. It was Robert, A
thick with drink. This
de my skin crawl, but he usually kept his distance. Alcohol stripped away
s grew louder, moving from the
he would stagger past, tha
te was not
side. Robert's hulking frame blocked the dim light from the h
slurred, his v
weight crushing the air from my lungs. The sme
flying up to push against hi
ight, aren't we?" he chuckled, one of his rough ha
isted violently, my mind screaming. This was wrong. T
ht, and with a sickening thud, his head stru
tly, his full weigh
mering against my ribs like a trapped bird. T
situation seeped in. He w
ved his dead weight off me. I crawled out from un
Alice found him in my space, th
runting with the effort, I dragged him across the rough carpet, his boots scraping a trail behind us. I man
leaned over the sink, my knuckles white as I gripped the coo
rightened eyes of two different colors-one a wa
nease, as if I were some kind of freak. But my grandmother's voice, soft and sure, would always echo in
othing in me. He was a ghost, a ge
re, against my pale skin, was an angry red mark, a brutal souvenir f
tears for tonight, but for all of it-for the loss of my grandmother, for
ilent, des
e days until my eighteenth birthday. By then, I would run. I would fi
and gray, filtered thr
urled on the cold tile floor, jumping at
arp shock that barely cut through my exhaustion. The red mark on my collarbone ha
nd in the kitchen, the clatter of a coffee pot. I
ed cardboard boxes. Robert was snoring
eyes and permanent frown lines,
"We need to be on the road in two hours. Start packing your
couch, my skin crawling as I edg
rdboard box. I didn't have much: a few clothes, a worn copy of To Kill a Mockingbi
oaned and sat up on the couch, clutchin
atly, placing a cup of black coffee on the
eyes scanned the ro
ere the high collar of my shirt hid his mark. A nasty smile played on his li
ber anything. Then I quickly looked
loading a rusty U-Haul trailer hit
ially irritable. I worked silently, carrying what I
ith all my worldly possessions on the floor beside me. Alice took the passenge
ook at the small, dilapidated house. It had been a prison, bu
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