Some people are born with soft voices and some cultivate them because softness makes other people come closer. Bianca had never needed either. She had a voice designed for rooms to rearrange themselves around it. At thirteen, she could cry on command. At seventeen, she could make adults believe nearly anything if she widened her eyes at the right moment. At thirty, standing in a gown that probably cost more than my first apartment’s annual rent, she still had the same gift she’d had all her life: the ability to turn her own ugliness into someone else’s shame.
I did not touch my face.
I did not step back.
I did not say a word.
That was the part she hated most.
If I had shouted, she would have known the script. If I had cried, she would have won in a way she understood. But silence has a way of exposing the naked shape of a thing, and Bianca had always despised being seen clearly.