My Funeral, His Destruction Stage
lle
s mask. He watched the movers carry the last boxes from my old apartment-our old apartment-down the hall and
out, his voice low and tight. "Moving just one
ize every surface, as if my presence had contaminated it. I stood in the doorway of my new, smal
o my side. She was still recovering from the flu, still fra
ment, clutching a brand-new, designer doll. She looked at
r, Father, and Marcus-stepped out, their faces wreathed in smiles. They didn' t even gla
s child with a warmth she rarely showed Daisy. "Ho
e, she' s doing wonderfully! Look at her, so bright, so charming." They fawned ove
me. Finally, my mother turned, her gaze sweeping over the sce
re here, perhaps you could make us all some tea.
hey truly saw me as nothing more than a glorified servant. An
erously soft. "Because if I recall correctly, Carter was just playing chef fo
. My mother gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "Adelle! How can you speak to your b
self. This is my apartment now. My space. And I will not be serving anyone in it. N
s terrifying her. My heart twisted in agony. I had tried to fight their battles, but all I was doing was hurting my child. T
ng my mother' s arm. "Please, Mrs. Moon, let' s not make a scene. Adelle is
nt, clear. I couldn't
my arms. My voice brooked no argument. I didn' t care wha
ll, firm statement. I leaned against the closed door, my strength compl
here," she cried, her voi
floor below him wasn't an act of defiance; it was an act of self-torture. And worse, it was a torture I was inflicti
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