Her Uncle Saw the Handprints, Then Took Out His Hearing Aids-QuynhTranJP

I was holding my newborn daughter when Uncle Ray saw the handprints blooming dark across my throat.

Not scratches.

Not shadows.

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Handprints.

They sat on my skin in five uneven marks, dark at the edges and swollen near the center, where Derek’s fingers had pressed too long and too hard.

The hospital room smelled like antiseptic, baby powder, old coffee, and the faint sourness of fear that no nurse ever writes in a chart.

My daughter was only hours old, tucked against my chest in a striped blanket, breathing with the tiny uneven rhythm of someone who had just arrived in a world already too loud.

The room went so quiet I could hear my baby’s tiny breath catching against my hospital gown.

Uncle Ray stood in the doorway and did not move.

He had come straight from work.

I could see it in the gray dust along his sleeve, in the black crescents under his fingernails, in the old mechanic’s jacket that still carried the smell of oil and cold metal.

He had a paper bag in one hand, the kind he always used when he brought food because he never trusted vending machines to feed people who were hurting.

The bag crinkled once.

Then it went still.

His eyes had landed on my throat.

Behind him, the hallway kept moving.

A nurse passed with a cart.

A family laughed somewhere near the elevators.

Some machine gave a soft, regular beep beside my bed, marking time as if time had not already split in half.

Before Uncle Ray walked in, Derek had been enjoying himself.

He sat in the visitor chair like a man waiting to be thanked.

One ankle rested over his knee.

His shirt cuffs were neat.

His hair was combed.

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