Shadows And Sunshine
dy to confront the next challenge awaiting me: home. The thought of facing my mother, lost in her own world of addiction, filled me with a
curious stares of passersby as I made my way through the familiar streets of our neighborhood. It was a rundown area, f
ew what to expect, of course. The stench of alcohol, the slurred speech, the vacant look
y mother slumped on the couch, a half-empty bottle of whiskey clutched in her hand
y mother slurred, her w
eplied, my voice tin
as she focused on me, her
she demanded, her voice
rying to keep my tone neutral despite
g of whiskey before setting the bottl
at good is school gonna do you? You're just like your fa
heck. I had heard it all before, the insults and the a
ot back, my voice trembling
hed with rage, her fa
eethed, her voice rising to a shout. "I'm yo
enched so tightly that my nails
art acting like a mother," I retor
ith a sharp crack. Pain exploded across my cheek, but I refused to show any weakness. I st
hing and the pounding of my heart. And then, without a word, I turned and fl
h the streets. I didn't know where I was going, only that I had to get away, f
if there would ever be a light at the end of the tunnel, a glimmer o