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I poured him a glass of water, watching him gulp it down with a desperation that turned my blood into ice. He didn’t cry. He didn’t throw a fit. He just drank the water and looked at me, waiting for me to make sense of a world that had suddenly turned cruel.
I didn’t ask any more questions. I didn’t want him to relive it yet. I told him to go sit in the living room and turn on his favorite cartoon.
I didn’t think. I didn’t plan. I just drove.
The drive to my parents’ house—the house I had bought for them—took ten minutes. It was a beautiful colonial in a quiet neighborhood, a symbol of my gratitude for raising me. I paid the mortgage. I paid the property taxes. I paid the insurance. I had transferred the deed to their names privately to give them dignity, but the financial tether was entirely mine.
When I walked through the front door, the scene was maddeningly normal.
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