Chapter 8
- I jolted, scrambled up from the floor, and pulled the bunny tight against my chest.
- Mom stood in the doorway. She’d changed into black, her face drained of color.
- Her hollow gaze landed on the stuffed bunny in my arms.
- “That’s… Grace’s,” she muttered, winding herself up again.
- “What else do you want to take from Grace? Killing her wasn’t enough?”
- She tried to rush me again.
- “Enough!”
- A roar came from behind her.
- Dad was braced against the doorframe, looking exhausted and shattered, his eyes bloodshot.
- “Victoria, stop. We failed her. We… failed both our daughters.”
- He shuffled up to me, hunched, suddenly so old.
- He stared at me, his lips moving before he finally got words out.
- “Ella… can we talk?”
- “There’s nothing to talk about.”
- I stared him down, shoved the stuffed bunny and the MP3 player into my pocket, and turned to leave.
- “I’ll get you a new heart.”
- Dad blurted it out, and it pinned me in place.
- I stopped and looked back at him, stunned.
- “Grace is gone… Our family can’t lose you too.”
- His voice was a mix of pleading and madness.
- “Your heart’s damaged because you donated organs to Grace.”
- Dad swallowed hard. “The doctors say you don’t have long.”
- “So I’ll give you my heart,” he offered. “Or your mom’s.”
- He shot a look at Mom, his gaze cold with resolve.
- “One of us is bound to be a match.”
- “We owe you.” He turned back to face me. “We’ll pay with our lives.”
- I stared at the two of them. It was insane.
- When they wanted to cut out my heart to save Grace, they said it was my fate.
- Now they’ve found out I was their biological daughter, and they wanted to carve out their own hearts to save me.
- What was my life to them?
- Just some thing they could trade whenever they felt like it?
- “I don’t need it.”
- I said it slowly, each word hard.
- “Your lives are filthy. You make me sick.”
- I didn’t look at them again and headed downstairs.
- This time, they didn’t try to stop me.
- I reached the front door and glanced back.
- Mom and Dad were still on the upstairs landing, standing still like statues, unmoving, watching me.
- Behind them was Grace’s empty room.
- I could almost see her sitting in her wheelchair, smiling at me from a distance, lifting her hand in a little wave.
- Goodbye, Grace.
- Goodbye to this house that caged me and buried every scrap of family I had.
- I pulled the door open and walked straight into the night without looking back.
- I followed the address Grace left and found the little place she’d rented for me.
- I unlocked the door. Inside, it was spotless.
- A wilted bunch of daisies sat on the table, with a note pressed beneath it.
- “Welcome home, my Ella.”
- My tears came again.
- I moved into the little house.
- At first, I shut myself in every day, hugging the stuffed bunny and playing Grace’s recordings over and over.
- Her voice was the only thing keeping me alive.
- I went to the hospital for a checkup.
- The results were bad.
- Malnutrition, plus all those organ donation surgeries, had wrecked me.
- Heart failure. Kidney failure. Liver fibrosis.
- The doctor looked over the reports, sighed, and said I didn’t have much time.
- I sat on a bench with the paperwork in my hands, calmly watching people come and go.
- Death never scared me.
- What’s terrifying was living like before—no dignity, no hope.
- Mom and Dad came looking for me a few times.
- They somehow found my address, showed up with medicine and gifts, and knocked on my door.
- I never opened it.
- They waited at my door, from day till night.
- One time it rained. Mom just stood there without an umbrella and let the rain drench her.
- Through the door, she kept speaking.
- “Ella, please open the door. I made you that chicken soup you love….”
- Chicken soup that I loved?
- I laughed out loud.
- I’d never even had it.
- The soup at home was always for Grace.
- All I ever got were her leftovers.
- I went to the door and yelled through it.
- “I don’t need it! Get the hell out! Don’t ever come bother me again!”
- After that, they didn’t show up for a long time.
- My body got worse by the day. Sometimes I’d black out and drop.
- Sometimes my chest hurt like it was being ripped open, keeping me up all night.
- I knew I didn’t have much time.
- I started planning how to spend whatever time I had left.
- I wanted to see the ocean—Grace said that’s what she wanted most.
- I wanted to spend a whole day at an amusement park, free for once, not just standing there wishing I were them.
- I wanted… to buy a burial plot for me and for Grace.
- Side by side.
- I was holding the bank card Grace had left me, about to go ask about plots at the cemetery, when an unknown number called.
- It was Dad’s lawyer.
- He said Victoria had died.