The Impostor Daughter
r. The floor bucked beneath us. The
her small body f
face white with panic. His eyes darted be
er returned
rl he called
n't he
sy into his arms, and turned t
ay. Debris rained down. A heavy piece of drywall struck my s
y vision was Ethan, shielding Daisy with his
. He left
a machine. I was in a hospital bed. My arm was in a
s al
iet. I followed the signs for the pediatric wing. At the end of
through t
lloons filled every corner. Daisy was propped up on a p
ere wa
into her mouth. He wiped a drip from her chin with a napkin,
e sunflower," he murmur
heir eyes wet with tears. They were a family. A happy
the forgot
he playground. She had been five. She had fallen from the swings. Ethan, only a tee
k with concern as he carried her all the way home. "
bandage, and sat with her for an hour, te
e would alway
en. The protection was for someone else now. A bitter, acidic jealousy filled my
had faile
was still