AT 3 A.M., I GOT A CALL FROM MY MOTHER — HER VOICE TREMBLING: ‘HELP… ME.’ I DROVE 300 MILES THROUGH A BLIZZARD AND FOUND HER OUTSIDE A HOSPITAL GATE IN THE FREEZING DARK — BAREFOOT, BRUISED, ABANDONED BY MY STEPFATHER AND HER OWN SON. SO I MADE SURE THEY SUFFERED TEN TIMES WORSE

At 3:07 a.m., my phone rang like an alarm from another life.
When I answered, my mother whispered, “Lena… help… me,” and then the line went dead.

I sat up in the dark, my heart hammering against my ribs. Snow slammed against my apartment window in Chicago, turning the city into a blur of white. My mother lived three hundred miles away in Cedar Hollow with my stepfather, Richard Hale—a man with polished shoes, polished lies, and a smile sharp enough to cut bone.

I called back. Nothing.

Again. Nothing.

On the thirteenth attempt, a nurse picked up from St. Agnes Hospital.

“Are you family?” she asked.

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