Grandma's Last Letter Made The Man Who Erased Me Face Court Alone-lequyen994 - Chainityai

Grandma’s Last Letter Made The Man Who Erased Me Face Court Alone-lequyen994

The first time my stepfather called me baggage, I was eight years old and still sleeping with my real father’s old flannel shirt under my pillow.

Mom had married him six months after Dad died.

She said we needed stability.

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He said he was taking on a lot.

Then he looked at me like I was the part of the deal nobody had warned him about.

At dinner, his son got served first.

My stepbrother got the bigger steak, the patient homework help, the weekend baseball games, the new sneakers before school started.

I got freezer food, hand-me-down shoes, and a sentence he loved using whenever I stood too close to comfort.

“Blood is thicker than water.”

Grandma hated that sentence.

She never argued with him in front of me at first, but she started coming over more often.

She brought Chinese food on Tuesdays and ate with me on the carpet in my room.

She came to parent conferences when Mom was busy.

She sat through my clarinet recital in the third row, waving like I had just played Carnegie Hall.

“You’re mine, sweetheart,” she always whispered. “Always.”

When I got older, my stepfather’s cruelty changed shape.

During the day, he made me invisible.

At night, he made sure I knew I was not.

He would come to my room and sit on the edge of my bed, pretending he needed someone to listen.

Then the talking became touching.

The touching became fear.

I tried to tell Mom once when I was twelve.

She slapped me hard enough to make my cheek burn for hours.

“Don’t you dare lie about him,” she said.

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