dy to confront the next challenge awaiting me: home. The thought of facing my mother, lost in her own world of addiction, filled me with a
curious stares of passersby as I made my way through the familiar streets of our neighborhood. It was a rundown area, f
ew what to expect, of course. The stench of alcohol, the slurred speech, the vacant look
y mother slumped on the couch, a half-empty bottle of whiskey clutched in her hand
y mother slurred, her w
eplied, my voice tin
as she focused on me, her
she demanded, her voice
rying to keep my tone neutral despite
g of whiskey before setting the bottl
at good is school gonna do you? You're just like your fa
ot back, my voice trembling
hed with rage, her fa
eethed, her voice rising to a shout. "I'm yo
enched so tightly that my nails
art acting like a mother," I retor
ith a sharp crack. Pain exploded across my cheek, but I refused to show any weakness. I st
hing and the pounding of my heart. And then, without a word, I turned and fl
h the streets. I didn't know where I was going, only that I had to get away, f
if there would ever be a light at the end of the tunnel, a glimmer o
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