She saw how Ms. Sterling looked at her new purse, the updated furniture in the apartment, and her latest model phone with barely concealed envy and calculation.
Back then, the mother-in-law would drop heavy hints about how nice it would be to help “a poor senior citizen,” how small her Social Security check was, and how expensive life had gotten.
Kiana would nod sympathetically and make appropriate sounds—but she never gave her money.
Ms. Sterling had taken deep offense and hadn’t called for three months after that rejection.
Now, apparently, she’d decided to operate through her son instead of directly.
Kiana went to bed late that night.
Darius was already snoring loudly, sprawled out over half the bed as usual.
She lay there staring at the ceiling in the darkness and knew with absolute certainty that something big was about to happen.
A strange calm was growing inside her chest.
Not fear, not panic—just a profound stillness that felt cold and hard, like ice.
She had learned this survival skill in childhood, when her parents drank and screamed at each other in their cramped rental house until they were hoarse.
She’d learned not to show emotion, not to scream back, just to wait quietly until the storm passed and then do whatever was necessary.
A new storm was approaching now, and Kiana knew she needed to be ready.
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