Part 2: At the family party, I found my four-year-old daughter crying in the corner with her hand twisted at an unnatural angle. My sister was standing there laughing. It’s just a joke.

At the family party, I found my four-year-old daughter crying in the corner with her hand twisted at an unnatural angle. My sister was standing there laughing. It’s just a joke.

She’s being dramatic. When I rushed to check my daughter’s injured hand, my sister pushed me away. Relax.

I barely touched her. Dad added, “Some kids just bruise easy.” Mom agreed. Stop making a scene.

I slapped my sister hard across the face and picked up my daughter to leave behind me. Mom cursed. Take your bastard child and never come back.

Dad threw a glass at us. Good riddance, brother added. Finally getting rid of the drama.

I rushed my daughter to the hospital where they found her hand was fractured. But the next morning, mom came to my house begging on her knees. Please give your sister a way to live.

The sound of my daughter’s sobbing cut through the cheerful noise of the family barbecue like a knife. I was helping my aunt carry drinks from the kitchen when I heard it. that particular pitch of pain that every mother recognizes.

Instantly, my blood turned to ice. I dropped the picture I was holding and sprinted toward the back corner of the yard. What I saw made my heart stop.

My four-year-old daughter, Ruby, was crumpled against the fence, her tiny body shaking with sobs. Her left hand hung at an angle that made my stomach lurch. Standing over her, arms crossed and smirking, was my older sister, Veronica.

What happened? I screamed, falling to my knees beside Ruby. Her face was stre with tears and snot, her eyes wide with terror and pain.

Veronica rolled her eyes dramatically. It’s just a joke. She’s being dramatic.

We were playing around and she fell. You know how clumsy kids are. I reached gently for Ruby’s injured hand, my fingers trembling.

She whimpered and tried to pull away. The wrist was already swelling, turning an ugly purple red color. This wasn’t a simple fall.

I knew my daughter and I knew when she was truly hurt versus when she wanted attention. This was real playing around. My voice came out strangled.

Her hand is broken. I moved to examine Ruby more closely, but Veronica shoved me hard in the shoulder. I stumbled backward, nearly losing my balance.

Relax. I barely touched her. Veronica snapped.

You’re always overreacting with that kid. Maybe if you didn’t baby her so much, she wouldn’t be such a crybaby. The rest of my family had gathered now, drawn by the commotion.

My father pushed through the small crowd, his face already twisted with annoyance rather than concern. What’s all this bus about? He glanced dismissively at Ruby, who was still crying.

Some kids just bruise easy. You’re embarrassing us in front of everyone. Embarrassing you?

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Look at her hand. She needs a doctor.

My mother appeared beside my father, her expression cold. Stop making a scene. You’re ruining the party over nothing.

Veronica said they were playing. Kids get hurt when they play. It’s normal.

I stared at these people who were supposed to be my family, supposed to protect my child. Ruby subs had quieted to whimpers, but she was cradling her injured hand against her chest, her whole body trembling. She was going into shock.

Something snapped inside me. I stood up, walked directly to Veronica, and slapped her as hard as I could across the face. The crack echoed across the suddenly silent yard.

Her head snapped to the side, and when she turned back to me, there was a bright red handprint blooming on her cheek. “You psycho!” Veronica shrieked, clutching her face. “I didn’t respond.” I scooped Ruby into my arms as carefully as I could, supporting her injured hand.

She buried her face in my neck, her small body shuddering. As I turned to leave, my mother’s voice cut through the air. Take your worthless child and never come back.

We don’t need this drama in our lives. I kept walking, but I heard my father clearly as a glass shattered behind us. He’d thrown it at us, missing my head by inches.

Good riddance. You were always the problem in this family. My brother Aaron’s voice was the last thing I heard.

Finally getting rid of the drama queen. Don’t let the door hit you on the way out. The drive to the emergency room felt like it took hours, though it was only 15 minutes.

Ruby had stopped crying, which frightened me more than the tears. She just stared at nothing, occasionally whimpering when the car hit a bump. Mommy’s here, baby, I whispered over and over.

You’re going to be okay. I promise you’re going to be okay. At the hospital, they took us back immediately when they saw Ruby’s hand.

A young doctor with kind eyes examined her gently while I explained what happened. I saw something shift in his expression when I mentioned my sister. The wrist is fractured, he said quietly after the X-rays came back.

But there’s something else I need to discuss with you. The break pattern is consistent with twisting force, not a fall. Can you tell me exactly what your sister said happened?

My hands started shaking. She said they were playing and Ruby fell, but Ruby can’t tell me what really happened. She’s too upset.

The doctor nodded slowly. I’m required by law to report this. The injury shows signs of intentional harm.

A child this age doesn’t fracture their wrist this severely from a simple fall during play. The next few hours passed in a blur of police officers, social workers, and medical staff. Ruby got a purple cast that she picked out herself, though she barely showed any interest in the color choices.

I called my boss and took emergency leave from work. There was no way I was leaving her side. We got home around midnight.

I carried Ruby inside, tucked her into my bed, and lay beside her, listening to her breathing even out as the pain medication kicked in. My phone had been buzzing non-stop since we left the party. I turned it on silent, but I could see the screen lighting up every few minutes.

53 missed calls, 37 text messages, all from family members. I didn’t read any of them. I just held my daughter and cried silently into her hair.

The next morning, I woke to aggressive pounding on my front door. For a moment, I panicked, thinking it might be Veronica. But when I checked the peepphole, I saw my mother standing on the porch.

She looked like she hadn’t slept. Her makeup was smeared. Her clothes rumbled.

I considered not opening the door. Every instinct told me to keep her away from Ruby. But something in her expression made me pause.

She looked desperate in a way I’d never seen before. I opened the door but didn’t invite her in. What do you want?

To my absolute shock, my mother dropped to her knees on the porch. Actual tears were streaming down her face. Please, she sobbed.

Please, you have to help us. You have to give your sister a way to live. Excuse me.

I couldn’t process what I was hearing. The police came to the house this morning. She gasped between sobs.

They arrested Veronica. They’re charging her with child abuse and assault. They said she could go to prison for years.

You have to drop the charges. You have to tell them it was an accident. I felt my jaw literally drop open.

Are you out of your mind? She broke Ruby’s wrist. The doctor said it was intentional.

It was an accident. My mother’s voice rose to a shriek. She didn’t mean to hurt Ruby that badly.

Yes, she was rough, but she was just trying to toughen her up. You know how soft you’ve made that child. Get off my property.

My voice was eerily calm. Right now, you’re going to destroy your sister’s entire life over this. She grabbed at my ankles.

She could lose her job, her reputation, everything over one little mistake. One little mistake. I yanked my feet away from her grasp.

She fractured my four-year-old daughter’s wrist and then laughed about it. You all stood there and told me I was overreacting while my child was in agony. You threw a glass at us.

You called Ruby vile names. And now you want me to lie to protect Veronica. We’re a family.

She was still on her knees, but anger was starting to replace the tears. Family protects each other. But you’ve always been selfish.

Always put yourself first. I’m protecting my daughter. That’s what actual parents do.

I started to close the door. Wait. She lurched forward, blocking the door with her body.

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