Tessa lunged. “You bitch!”
I stepped back out of reach.
My mother’s entire face changed. Panic flickered beneath the rage for the first time.
“Maya,” she hissed, voice suddenly low and urgent, “you are not calling the police on your own mother.”
“I already did.”
“You ungrateful little monster!”
“No,” I said. “Just done.”
Tessa began crying instantly, as if tears were a weapon she could deploy on command.
“This is insane! Mom, tell her to stop! Tell her we can talk about this!”
I looked at her with chilling calm. “You had your chance to talk. You chose theft and assault.”
“It was one slap!”
“It was trespassing. Attempted theft. Assault. Harassment. Shall I keep going?”
My mother pointed a shaking finger at me. “After everything I sacrificed for you—”
I cut her off. “Do you want the list?”
She stopped.
Good.
Because I had the list. Every single wound. Every strategic humiliation. Every time she chose Tessa and then called it love.
“You want to talk about sacrifice?” I asked quietly. “Let’s talk about when Dad died and you emptied my college fund to pay for Tessa’s pageants because she ‘had more potential.’ Or when I worked double shifts in undergrad to stay enrolled while you told relatives I was ‘too cold’ for marriage and ‘too plain’ for joy. Or when I sent you money after your surgery and you thanked Tessa publicly for ‘taking care of the family’ while I was sleeping in hospital call rooms.”
Her mouth opened.
Closed.
Opened again.
No sound came out.
That was the thing about truth: once spoken aloud, it took up space.
And I was finally done making myself small enough for their lies.
The elevator dinged.
Two security officers stepped out—Marcus, whom I knew from late-night arrivals after brutal shifts, and a younger woman I had seen at the desk but never learned the name of.
They took one look at my face, my wine-stained blouse, the luggage, and the two women crowding my door.
Marcus’s expression turned grave. “Dr. Rao, are you all right?”
“I will be,” I said.
My mother immediately straightened, slipping back into that polished act. “This is a misunderstanding. We’re family.”
Marcus didn’t even glance at her. “Ma’am, I’ll need you both to step away from the unit.”
Tessa let out a sob. “She’s throwing us out! She sold our family home!”
“It was never yours,” Marcus said flatly.
That made me blink. He hadn’t missed much over the years.
My mother drew herself up indignantly. “I demand respect.”