
My Family Chose My Brother's Scratch Over My Dying Heart
Chapter 3
Three days.
Three days had passed since I died on that operating table, and my mother was still complaining about me.
"She didn't even come to pick up Ethan from the hospital," Vivian muttered, her heels clicking against the marble floor of the foyer as she pushed through the front door of the villa. "After everything I've done for her. Twenty-two years, and this is the thanks I get."
Richard snorted from behind her, loosening his tie with one sharp tug. "Told you from the beginning. That girl was nothing but trouble."
I drifted through the doorway behind them, invisible, weightless, and utterly hollow.
The villa looked exactly as I remembered. Cream walls. Fresh flowers on the entryway table—white peonies, Vivian's favorite. The kind of home that appeared in architecture magazines, all clean lines and carefully curated beauty. I used to stand in this foyer after school, backpack still on my shoulders, and try to convince myself that this place was mine too.
It never was.
"This was never my home," I said to the empty air. "I just borrowed it for twenty-two years."
No one heard me. No one ever would.
Vivian dropped her purse onto the console table and reached for her phone, already scrolling. Richard poured himself two fingers of scotch without offering her any. The two of them moved through the house like planets in separate orbits, held together only by the gravity of their shared resentment toward me.
Then Vivian's phone rang.
She glanced at the screen. Metropolitan General Hospital—the official line, not a personal extension. She answered with the clipped authority of a woman who expected everyone to have good news ready.
"Dr. Weston."
"Dr. Weston." The voice on the other end was young, careful. A hospital administrator, probably. Someone who had drawn the short straw. "This is regarding your daughter, Autumn Weston."
Vivian's jaw tightened. "What did she do now? Is she still refusing to come home? Tell her the dramatics aren't—"
"Dr. Weston." A pause. Heavy and deliberate. "Autumn passed away three days ago. Ruptured spleen. Severe internal hemorrhaging. We've been trying to reach you. We need you to come in to... to identify and claim the remains."
The silence that followed was the loudest thing I had ever heard.
Vivian's hand began to shake. Just slightly. Just enough that the phone trembled against her ear.
"That's—" She stopped. Started again. "That's not possible. She was in the same car as Ethan. Ethan is fine. He was discharged this morning. She can't possibly—"
"Dr. Weston, I'm very sorry."
The call ended. Or maybe she dropped it. I couldn't tell.
I watched her stand there in the center of her beautiful living room, the phone loose in her fingers, her face doing something I had never seen it do before. Crumbling. Slowly, like a wall that had taken one crack too many.
She was trying to remember. I could see it—the way her eyes went distant and searching, rewinding the tape of that night.
And then the memories hit her.
The blood on the emergency room floor. The trail of it, dark and wet, leading from the hallway to where she had been standing. The hand that had grabbed the hem of her white coat—my hand, desperate and trembling. The voice that had barely been a voice at all.
*Mom. Please. I can't breathe.*
She had stepped over the blood. She had pulled her coat free from my grip. She had walked away without looking back.
"You remember now," I said softly. "Don't you, Mom?"
She pressed her fist against her mouth.
"You walked through my blood," I told her. "You didn't even look down."
---
She drove herself to the hospital. Richard followed after a moment's hesitation, his scotch abandoned on the counter.
The morgue was in the basement, the way morgues always are—as if the hospital wanted to keep death as far from the living as possible. Lucas Chen was waiting outside the door when Vivian arrived. His eyes were red-rimmed and raw, the kind of exhaustion that sleep couldn't fix.
He didn't say anything when he saw her. He just held the door open.
The room was cold and sterile, all stainless steel and fluorescent light. The smell of antiseptic couldn't quite cover the other smell underneath it. Vivian's footsteps slowed as she approached the drawer he indicated. Her hands balled into fists at her sides.
The drawer slid open with a soft metallic sound.
My face was pale. So pale it didn't look real—more like a wax impression of the person I used to be. My dark hair fanned out against the white sheet. There was a stillness to me that no living person ever has, that particular quality of absolute rest that cannot be faked or performed.
Vivian took one look and stumbled backward. Her shoulders hit the wall hard enough to make a sound.
"No." The word came out cracked, barely a word at all. "No, this isn't—"
"Dr. Weston." Lucas's voice was quiet and controlled, but his eyes were wet. He had clearly been crying before she arrived. "During the accident, Autumn positioned herself to absorb the impact. She protected Ethan. The force ruptured her spleen." He paused. "The internal bleeding was severe, but it was survivable. With prompt intervention, she would have—"
He stopped himself.
But the sentence finished itself in the room anyway, hanging over all of us like smoke.
*If you hadn't taken every qualified doctor with you. If you hadn't hung up the phone. If you had looked down at your daughter instead of stepping over her blood.*
Vivian slid down the wall until she was sitting on the cold floor, her designer coat pooling around her, her hands pressed flat against the tile.
"I killed her," she whispered. "I killed her."
I stood beside her. As close as I could get, though she couldn't feel me.
"Yes," I said. "You did."
But then I watched her face change.
It was subtle at first—a tightening around the eyes, a shift in the set of her mouth. The grief was still there, but something else was moving underneath it now. Something defensive and slippery.
"She should have told me," Vivian said, her voice hardening almost imperceptibly. "If it was that serious, she should have said something clearly. She should have—"
"I did." The words tore out of me before I could stop them. "I crawled to you. I grabbed your coat. I told you I couldn't breathe. What else was I supposed to do, Mom? Write you a letter?"
She couldn't hear me.
She never could.
---
When they got home, the kitchen lights were on.
Ethan had set up a small celebration on the kitchen island—a bakery box from the place downtown, the one with the real strawberries on top. There were balloons, pale blue and white, tied to the back of a chair. He was standing with his back to the door, phone in hand, probably taking a photo for his social media.
"Mom, you're back!" He turned with a wide, easy grin. "Look, I got the strawberry cake you like. I thought we could—"
The slap came so fast that even I flinched.
Vivian's open palm connected with Ethan's cheek with a sharp, ringing crack. The sound bounced off the kitchen tiles. The grin vanished. The cake box tilted on the counter.
Ethan pressed his hand to his face, his eyes wide with shock.
This was the first time. In nineteen years, she had never once raised her hand to him.
"Your sister is dead." Vivian's voice was barely above a whisper, which somehow made it worse than shouting. "She's been dead for three days, and I didn't know. Because I didn't—" Her voice broke. "Because I didn't listen."
Ethan went very still.
I watched his face carefully. The shock was real—but underneath it, something else flickered. Fast. Instinctive. There and gone before Vivian could have caught it even if she'd been looking for it.
Fear.
Not the fear of a boy who had just been struck by his mother for the first time.
Something colder. Something calculating.
"What are you afraid of, Ethan?" I moved closer, studying the way his jaw tightened, the way his thumb pressed hard against his phone screen through his pocket. "Is it the dashboard footage you deleted? The message you sent that night?"
*搞定了。她死了。*
His eyes darted once—just once—toward the front door. Then back to Vivian. Then down to the floor.
"Mom," he said softly, his voice carefully arranged into something gentle and wounded. "I'm so sorry. I didn't know either. I thought she was okay."
But his hand, hidden in his pocket, was gripping his phone so tightly his knuckles had gone white.
"I see you," I said.
The balloons bobbed gently in the air above the untouched cake.
"I see exactly what you are."
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