“I understand enough,” I cut in. “And I’m exactly what they don’t expect.”
I grabbed her shoulders gently but firmly.
“You still believe they might change. I don’t. You’re kind. I’m not. I know how to deal with people like them.”
The visiting bell rang.
We looked at each other—two identical faces, but only one of us ready to walk into that house.
We switched quickly.
She put on my hospital clothes. I put on hers. Her ID. Her shoes. Her life.
When the nurse opened the door, she didn’t question anything.
“Heading out?” she asked.
I nodded quietly, lowering my eyes.
“Yeah.”
And just like that, I walked out.
Ten years later, the world felt too big—and exactly the same.
“Your time’s up, Marcus,” I muttered.
Their house sat at the end of a worn-down street in a rough neighborhood outside Detroit. Peeling paint. Rusted gate. The air smelled like neglect.
Inside, it was worse.
I saw Ava immediately. Sitting on the floor, clutching a broken doll.
“Hey, sweetheart,” I said softly.
She didn’t come to me. She pulled back.
Then a voice snapped behind me.
“Well, look who decided to come back.”
I turned. Marcus’s mother stood there, arms crossed, eyes sharp.
“Where were you? Running to that crazy sister of yours?”