My Mother's Cruel, Blind Heart
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ears of my life for
hrough me. She embraced my estranged stepfat
servant's quarters and left to eat from the g
with my mother. She watched for a momen
ttered. I was nothing to he
black car screeched to a halt. My grandfather stumb
with shock, l
a... you're my son's real
pte
Hender
inel to a mother who couldn't see me. Then she woke up, and
and the constant, dull ache of hope. My mother, Deborrah Rose, lay before me, a beautiful, fragile statue. Her car crash had taken everything – my childhoo
s, from turning her, bathing her, feeding the machines that kept her alive. My voice, once bright, was now a low murmur, the only sound she' d he
a quiet flutter of eyelids. Her eyes, the same shade of blue
se. Hope surged through me, a dizzying, terr
furniture, part of the sterile air. A deep, unf
borr
here. His face was strong, chiseled, framed by dark, silver-streaked hair
ng akin to it, crossed her face. Not for me, her devoted daughter,
he rasped, her voi
ed after my actual father died. The man she' d divorced before the accident, disappearing from our lives, taking his vast
ong strides. He knelt beside her bed, taking h
emotion. Tears welled in his eyes. Tears for her.
nized him. My mother, the woman I had sacrificed everything for, wa
Then she turned her head slightly, her gaze finally landing on
?" she asked, her v
it was shattering into a million icy fragments. Fi
o me, his eyes narrowing slightly. A flash of something
es, doctors, and what looked like a personal security detail flooded
breath. He shielded Deborrah with his b
oice suddenly sharp and commanding. The se
ard, caught sight of me. "And who' s this
assessing. A deep frown carved lines into his forehead. H
" he said, his voice flat, as if the word tasted sour in his mouth.
mbled, my mind reeling. Family? I was his daughter. H
oted caregiver. I was b
meras. Deborrah, now sitting upright in a wheelchair, was being whisked away by oth
ace gleamed under the harsh hospital lights. Christoph
soft lighting. It smelled of expensive cologne and old money. I sank into the
his arm immediately going around her shoulders. She leaned into him, a soft sigh es
mmered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. The silence in the car was he
spital. I could hear whispers from the front sea
the assistant murmured,
lance. Make sure this vehicle is thoroughly detailed. Better yet,
The mess. I was the stain he wanted scrubbed
ed hard, trying to fight it down. I couldn' t throw up in his pr
much. My stomach rebelled. I leaned forward, a guttural sound
akes. "Hey!" he snapped, h
ser. His face, when he looked at me, was a mask
' s shoulder, her eyes closed. Not a word. Not a
finally pulled up to a massive, ornate iron gate, my eyes widened. This wasn' t just a hous
veway, a young girl, no older than fifteen, burst out of the imposin
hrieked, running
I hadn't seen in years. She practically launched herself
" Deborrah cried, hu
ild, a stranger, as if they had always been toge
Doria Winters. Christopher' s mother. My grandmother, though she would never claim me. Her
ded, her voice dripping with disdain. She
er, this is... Aisha. Deborrah' s daughter. Apparently." H
clinging to Kaylee. "Her daughter?" Her voice climbed an octave in disbelief.
rom her history. That' s wha
," she declared, her voice absolute. "Christopher, instruct the staff. Find her a place in the ser
l blows, each one echoing the