That slap carried all of my rage, every ounce of strength I had. It carried the blood in my daughter's shoe and the missing toe and the teacher's smile and the parents' laughter and the paintings torn to shreds and the phone smashed on the pavement and every single day I had lived quietly, humbly, swallowing my name and my rank and my birthright because I believed that peace was worth more than power.
It sent Luna stumbling backward. Her heel caught on the stone. She staggered, her hand flying to her cheek, and for one perfect, crystalline moment, the arrogance shattered and what was underneath was just a woman who had never been hit by someone who meant it.
I moved to hit her again.
A hand seized my hair from behind. Fingers twisted into the roots and yanked, snapping my head back. Another parent. Then another. They came at me from every side, punching and kicking, a mob that moved with the frenzied confidence of people who believed they were untouchable because they stood behind the right name.
"You filthy wench! How dare you lay a hand on Mrs. Ferraro? Are you tired of living?!"
A kick to my ribs. I curled around the pain.
"Yeah, your brat isn't even dead yet. Why rush to join her?"