Mark’s voice boomed through the door again. “She lies, Emily! You know how she is. She’s unstable.”
That was the line, wasn’t it? The one men like him always used. And Mom, with her old-school loyalty to appearances, had handed it to him like a loaded weapon.
I unlocked my phone and dialed 911 with trembling fingers. I kept my voice low as I gave my address and said, “My sister is injured. Her husband is outside my home trying to get in. I think she has a broken rib. He assaulted her.”
The dispatcher told me officers and an ambulance were on the way.
Before I could exhale, the back motion light snapped on.
Sarah’s eyes widened in horror. “Emily.”
I turned toward the kitchen window just in time to see a dark shape moving past the glass.
“He has the spare gate code,” I whispered.
The dispatcher was still in my ear when the sound came—a crash of metal from my backyard, followed by the sharp splintering crack of my back door being forced open.
“Emily! Emily, please!”
It was my sister.
I ran barefoot down the hallway, tore the lock open, and found Sarah slumped against the porch railing as if she’d been left there. Her blond hair was soaked dark with rain, one side of her lip was split, and her right arm was wrapped tightly across her ribs. When she looked up at me, her expression was wild, hunted—nothing like I had ever seen before.
“Help me,” she whispered, and then she collapsed into my arms.
Sarah was twenty-nine—stubborn, sharp, and usually the strongest presence in any room. Feeling her go limp against me sent a chill through my body. I pulled her inside, kicking the door shut behind us, and lowered her onto the living room rug. She cried out the instant her side touched the floor.
“I think—” She sucked in a breath, wincing. “I think my rib is broken.”
My phone buzzed in my robe pocket. I almost ignored it, but when I pulled it out and saw Mom’s name on the screen, something tightened in my stomach.
The message read: Don’t help that cripple. She’s a traitor.
I stared at the words until they blurred.
Cripple.
Traitor.
About her own daughter.
I looked down at Sarah, shivering on my floor, struggling to breathe through the pain. “What happened?” I asked.