voice was quiet, but it cut throug
yebrow raised in
" I repeated, my gaze locked on
if I were a child throwing a tantrum. "It's just a pictu
ant to me," I countered. "I
"We have to focus on the living, on our son's happiness. Julia was kind e
own it was so special to you, I wouldn't have... Mark, maybe you should put it back." She played
e was enjoying this, asserting his dominan
appointment lately. After your accident, I gave you everything. A home, a child, a purpose. And a
e chronic pain from my injuries that I never spoke of, the exhaustion that clung to me like a second skin, th
harsh," she said softly, placing a hand on his arm. "Elara is j
well, unstable. She was the capable
sugar and the thrill of his new toy, ran at me. He wasn't p
!" he screamed, and
tumbled backward, my legs tangling. My hip hit the sharp corner of the coffee table with a sick
aw Leo's face. He wasn't scared or remorseful. He looked triumphant. A
had coached my own child to attack me. A wave of nausea, more potent than the pain, washed over me. The darkness at the edge of m
" she said.