After Grandma Hit Matthew, Claire Returned With Three Papers-Ginny

My mother slapped my son over a toy, and the whole family pretended not to see the blood.

I did not say anything at first.

I carried him to the hospital.

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And when I came back with the report in my hand, even the favorite grandson stopped smiling.

Matthew was only six years old.

His legs still swung above the floor when he sat in my mother’s dining chairs, and his sneakers made that soft rubber squeak against the polished wood when he ran too quickly through her hallway.

That evening, he had been sitting beside me at family dinner, holding his red toy car under the edge of the table like it was something sacred.

The room smelled of pot roast, buttered carrots, and the vanilla cake Valerie had brought in a white bakery box.

My mother, Theresa Roberts, sat at the head of the table with her usual posture, spine straight, chin lifted, eyes moving over everyone as if she were grading us.

Valerie sat beside Dylan, smoothing his hair whenever he reached for another roll.

Dylan was eight.

Matthew was six.

In my mother’s house, that truth had never mattered.

Dylan was Valerie’s son, which meant every rude gesture became confidence, every grab became curiosity, and every tantrum became a sign that he simply knew what he wanted.

Matthew was my son, which meant every breath he took was treated like a debt.

The red toy car was cheap.

It came from a flea market table with three missing wheels from other toys rattling in a cigar box beside it.

Its paint was chipped near the front bumper, and one door had to be pushed twice before it clicked shut.

To Matthew, it was treasure.

His father, Julian, had bought it for him before he died.

Julian had placed it in Matthew’s little hands and told him that every car needed a good driver.

Matthew had not forgotten.

Neither had I.

My mother knew exactly where that toy came from.

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