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se. He was my protector, my teacher, and my first love. Fo
led him, pregnant with our child, only
put him on speakerphone so I could hea
fun," he said. "She should
ed me. I got rid of our son, to
. In her place, I became "Nine," a r
ith "amnesia." When the police ask who will be my
a shy smile. "He's
pte
Bradl
don' t break. Mine did. It shattered into a million pieces th
sound of my father's heavy footsteps on the wooden floor was the first warning. Then came
on, not
to a drink in his
ers. Their words were a venomous tide, rising and falling, sometimes mur
d was a weapon. Crying was a
her, the sound a sharp crack in the already tense air. I let o
rcloud. "What are you crying for? This ha
idn't look at me. She just said, "Stop that
n the stairs, a small ghost in pajamas, and watch them tear each o
inting a trembling finger at me. "She d
llie wa
e different from mine. Her cries brought my parents running. Her tears were kisse
tle creature, and they adored her
ie in her crib, her face red, her mouth a perfect 'O' of distress. I watched her, mesmerized. She ha
she
Kallie into her arms. "Oh, my sweet baby, did the
orway behind her. "See, Jann
orm, a fragile truce declared. Neither of them saw m
argument wasn't even a shout. It was a cold, quiet conversation
e," my mother sai
my father shot back
eds her
, not one where her moth
tues, her needs, her future. My name was never mentioned. It was as if
ke from my throat. It was
heads snapp
e," my mother snappe
e words were stuck, a hard lump in my throat. I just po
ic," my father grum
into the kitchen, started to cry in
p. "Look what you've done, Johnston. You've upset her." She g
Kallie, at two, was deemed to need her mother. I, at seven, was old enough to
things and all of Kallie's things. The pink blankets, the stuffed animals,
es. She was leaving. She was taking the only source of light
slammed shut,
rd tearing from me. I ran d
ious oval. My mother's eyes met mine in the rearview mirror for a single,
p. She didn't
all legs pumping, my
ound of its engine faded, leaving only the so
a duffel bag in his hand. He didn
s voice devoid of any emotion. "I'm
e air smelled of manure and damp earth. My father's parents, whom I'
nally left him. Good riddance." She looked at my grandfather. "At least he kept the Bradley blood.
send money when I can. I have to get my life back on track." He looked at me through the op
gravel driveway with two strangers w
'd never liked my mother. They saw me as her lingering shadow, a burden the
ndmother one morning, my vo
low, calculating smile spread
in the basement. A mountain of my grandfather's and
as not a one-time task. "Don't think you're getting a free ride
washed clothes until my hands were raw, and served two bitter old people who saw

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